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Bulky Exhibit - Inventory of Properl^K:quired as ‘Evidence 

FD-192 (Rev. 12-5-58) 











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NATIONAL RENAISSANCE ^RTY 





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“With these preachers of equality will l not be mixed up and confounded . For 
thus speaketh justice unto me: *Men are not equaV” — Nietzsche. 

PHILADELPHIA HEADQUARTERS: 

876 Granite Street . . . Philadelphia 24, Pa. 

National Director — JAMES H. MADOLE 

224 B. Main St, Beacon, N. Y. /?yf 


AIMS: 

1. Nationalization of our people 
through an educational cam- 
paign among college, church 
and labor groups. 

2. Termination of p o 1 i t i c a 1 
bureaucracy and establish- 
ment of rule by the intel- 
lectual elite. 

3. Private enterprise and equal- 
ity of opportunity for the 
ambitious. 

4. Repeal of all bureaucratic 
red tape involving private 
enterprise and industrial 
evolution through monoply. 

5. Vast rearmament program 
for defense; atomic enerj 
to be governed by 
military. 

6. Ten year reconstruction pro- 
ject for complete slum clear- 
ance. 

7. Right to work in “open 
shops" free of labor czar 
tyranny. 

8. To free politics and culture 
from domination by racial 
minorities. 

9. Acceptance and reindustri- 
alization of Germany and 
Japan as Allies in the West- 
ern coalition against Com- 
munism. 

10. To cease 

ican wealth 

abroad while many Ameri- 
cans remain poorly housed, 
clothed and fed. 

11. Free college education for 
all American youth. 

12. To create a united national 
community wherein workers 
and management can work, 
hand in hand, toward our 
great national destiny en- 
visioned by the founders of 
our American Republic. 

13. To replace cowardice and 
the glorification of weak- 
ness with a national com- 
munity based on courage, 
strength and loyalty, 


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NATIONAL RENAISSANCETARTY 


‘ With these preachers of equality will l not be mixed up and confounded . For 
thus speaketh justice unto me: ‘Men are not equaF” — Nietzsche. 


AIMS: 

1. Nationalization of our people 
through an educational cam- 
paign among college, church 
and labor groups. 

2. Termination of po 1 i t i c a I 
bureaucracy and establish- 
ment of rule by the intel- 
lectual elite. 

3. Private enterprise and equal- 
ity of opportunity for the 
ambitious. 

4. Repeal of all bureaucratic 
red tape involving private 
enterprise and industrial 
evolution through monoply. 

5. Vast rearmament program 
for defense; atomic energy 
to be governed by the 
military. 

6. Ten year reconstruction pro- 
ject for complete slum clear- 
ance. 

7. Right to work in “open 
shops” free of labor czar 
tyranny. 

8. To free politics and culture 
from domination by racial 
minorities. 

9. Acceptance and reindustri- 
alization of Germany and 
Japan as Allies in the West- 
ern coalition against Com- 
munism. 

10. To cease squandering Amer- m 
ican wealth and resources, 
abroad while many Ameri- 


PHILADELPHIA HEADQUARTERS: 

876 Granite Street . . . Philadelphia 24, Pa. 
National Director — JAMES H. MADOL5 
224 E. Main St*» JJeacon, N. Y. 












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cans remain poorly housed, 
clothed and fed. 

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11. Free college education 
all American youth. 

12. To create a united national 
" community wherein workers 

and management can work, 
hand in hand, toward our i/ y j 
great national destiny en- 
visioned by the founders of 
our American Republic. 

13. To replace cowardice and 
the glorification of weak- 
ness . with a national com- 
munity based on courage, 
strength and loyalty. 


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Loyalty, Service, Obedience , 


1* .Original and photostatic copy of a pamphlet entitled ’'The llace Questionv& 'Eoleran.ee 
' Racket®.' . ; . . i*V. ' 

2. Original & photostatic copy of program of the Kational -Rensis3&ce; P^t^ r :’v ' ' ; _ v- '; 

3* Original & photostatic.- copy of. National rfenaissance /-Bulletin j~. 6/U9 • . . - , -?•’« 1'b: v : :i 

U* Copy of n The Broom.»,, 9»i!?/U9 ' and note listing officers of Nat.fenaissance party. > 

5»: ltr. written on «Nat. fenaissanee Party® /stationery dtd. 2/7/50, addressed to nfear \ 
Mac n (Henry MacFarland, Jr.) and Signed «Tames H.>Hadole. /. v. ■; ’ . - . • 

6. - Ltr. from Nat. Renaissance Party i*/l8/^0. . I -• Si C r- 

7*m ltr. from Nat. Renaissance Party 6/7/50. . - •/ '/ ' . > , •/" V '• , ■; -■ 'V.; 

8*; ltr.,dtd. 7/20/50 to SDear fee®, signed, n James H.^Madole, written on ? ^dt?'Renaissan'ce 
Party stationery. ■ j-i. * .. ■ ; v/>; •_ 

9i . T.i -hftyfttn.ra rvxvj. ^ .contributor- from Nat. Renaissance Party, feed. 5/7/^l»fr.om /-> . f> 

10. Destroyed- Duplicate j£rajQafBrrei^redS rg5s^teggter;EAB 7/9 /53 — . v . u Y • . . ■ " , 

11. January issue o f . ®Nat. Renaiss ance Bulletin® furnished by I 

• .‘on ‘3/3/53 to SA I ~T - v - - '■ . / .• •/ . \ . ' -/YY Y.' 

12. One postal card sent to one| | fromKEITH* TH0MPS0N,Nat . Renaissance Party* 

; "i to attend mass meeting, at hall at 165E. 86tn St., 'NYC. feed 3/18/53 from I I / 


13. literature distributed b y the Nat. Renaissance Party • recdf rom l T Y ^,1 Y^YY 

' I | by SA P. LONOO. 4/6/53 v-Nojfc. to -be returned;.,?- v > s ;| 

! lhi^Copy of Jan. , 1952 issue of h'Nat^^feni^s'sahee Bufoetin*.V * '.-t- iiY-Y. ;• •-/ ‘y‘i \ • ;V 

! l6. ;Copy of ;Dec,. .1952,. issue of «Nati ^Renaissance Bulietin!*^ . " Y, •* i v YV - Y ' ’ Y, Y Yt?|S 

17 * Y-t ■ -«-'.o.ct.j- 1952 ■ .• •« -T».' 

13. ■« . July j 1952 « , X 

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20^. Throwaway bearing dtd. .3 /Ui/ 53 a entitiedVWorld| je)E^. Ca^ ^'New^.fely i ^ar*.i 
NOTEV 'Exhibits; 14. lh- thru 1A20 ; reed- from Newark i i|./20/53i ; 

21V Postal card addressed to Nat. Renaissance Party NTG'.froml ( , ahd:..i.- : 1%i 

postmarked Vlg/53 from I ~ ~~ 1 . Hv ^ ^ A.- 1 ' 

22. One' unused -postal card^ ' annouh ^^|^^ll/53^eeting] f 'eJ^ ^ jRat . ferSissahce; ; PSriy^ :: .fedd?f ^m'^^ |^l 

23v C opy of Feb... 1953 > *Nat. Renaissance Bull&tin l . t recd ? from ' ' ' ’ k 

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NATIONAL RENAISSANCE BULLETIN 

JANUARY, 1949 

Official organ of the National Renaissance Party devoted to Animism, a philosophy 
based on the values of individual personality, private enterprise and government 

toy the intellectual elite. 

“They distribute praise and censure with a view to their own interests; they say that dishonesty 
is: shameful and unjust — meaning by dishonesty the desire to have more than their neighbors; for 
mowing their own inferiority, they would be only too glad to have equality. . . . But if there were a 
mail who had sufficient force, he would shake off and break through and escape from all this; he 
would trample under foot all our formulas and spells and charms, and all our laws that sin against 
nature.” Plato 

I AMERICA, AWAKE! 


Many Americans, who peruse carefully their vote in a political bloc and own a large segment 
morning newspapers, find that the world is being of the American, so called, free press. These 
sw[ept and devastated by the malignant social minority groups, both here and in Europe, have 
cancer of Communism and each tries, in his own invariably voted and fought for the Socialist 
wiy to combat the spread of this corrupt and Communist philosophies of a non-existent 
philosophy by dutifully going to the polls on universal equality. 

Election Day and voting for what he considers, To make the situation far worse, many mtel- 
orj at least fervently hopes, is a truly American lectuals 'belonging to these racial minorities hold 
minded public official. What the average Ameri- dominant positions in our labor unions, these 
can fails to see, through lack of information, is same officials aided and abetted by that part of 
th!e ironclad fact that the issues involved in the of the press controlled by the racial minority 
struggle against Communism are essentially, groups are stirring up class hatred and envy, 
philosophic and politics as practiced in a parlia- the forerunners of outright Communism through- 
mentary democracy are merely used as a means out America. American workers have been co- 
tof an end and never as an end in itself. If Com- erced, misled and very often threatened with the" 
munist leaders were to decide that the battle was loss of their jobs, the one slender thread on 
gdhig poorly for them in the parliamentary type which hung the lives and welfare of their families, 
body known as Congress, which seems to be by the labor czars who rule the supposedly free, 
the center of crackpot polidcu5is‘lvE6~have" a* unions of America. Whether or not he so desires 
'm%ma~forcOspersing our national'wealth over the the American worker is forced to pay exorbitant 
surface of the globe at the expense of gullible dues and go out on strike for indefinite periods 
Americans who actually consider these politicians at the whim of his masters, who are invariably 
ai great humanitarians, they would call upon the supported in their vicious tactics by both the 
great masses of misled American workers to press and front organizations of at least two of 
revolt against “the corrupt Capitalist ruling class our expertly organized racial minorities. All who 
iri America.” We witnessed in the last political defy the exorbitant demands of these labor dicta- 
scramble, the emergence of left wing Socialist tors are accused of being fascists, scabs, labor 
nimripd politicians as leaders of the nation. The .baiters and invariably are accused of the old 
defeat of the Republican Party was due solely / Marxist standby; racial prejudice. How can a 
to the widespread apathy of the great majority \ working man adequately support his wife and 
of the American people who are fed up with the i family, if the national -labor force whi ch 
mad scramble for positions at the public swill/ should be administered and protected bv the 


pail by the usual motley crew of boresome and 
ujterly inadequate politicians from the old line 
political parties. 

[Communism, as a dynamic political and social 
philosophy or way of life can only be defeated 
by a more virile and logical philosophy based 
on the adequate and just use of American wealth 
and resources for and by the population of our 
nation. No one in his right mind can hope to 
combat this plague by glorifying the mummiflecT 
arid outmoded belief in parliamentarian govern- - 
nient. ^T he victors, that is the groups who suc- 
ceed in placing political stooges in office, are 
always the well organized racial minorities who 


State, is being constantly used as a pawn in the 
game of breaking down class unity within the 
national borders? 

As opposed to the Marxist doctrine of universal 
equality, creation of a mulatto or hybridized race 
of serfs for a group of intellectuals belonging to 
the racial minorities who conceived the basic 
philosophy of Marxism, Animism is a . Nation- 
alist philosophy based on the sound fact that 
our nation has been, is, and always will be the 
envy of the civilized world because of our system 
of private enterprise and individual initiative 
which enabled ambitious and hard working immi- 
grants to build up the colossal economic empires 


!-/ 

! 0 ' > 


* 


of today. Animism offers all citizens the right to 
work, compete and by their own ambition and 
ability to prove themselves worthy of economic 
or professional success. A man must rise or fall 
by his own mei'its in this world and no Marxist 
theory can make a fundamentally weak and un- 
ambitious nature into a successful, upright and 
honest worker. If the Marxist theory of a uni- 
versal equality had a basis in fact then no work- 
ing man would be able to strive in order that 
his children might have the better things in life. 
Equality implies the absence of change or flux 
hence no man could, on the merit of greater 
ability or merit rise above his fellows. All ambi- 


tion would perish and living would be considered 
futile. Neither races nor individuals are equal 
and only the best stock and the most capable 
and ambitious are deigned to govern, this is the 
fundamental tenet of- Animism; the second tenet 
being that all citizens of the state have a right, 
to a free college education and freedom to com- 
pete with each other and gain success in their 
chosen field of endeavor through perseverance, 
ability arid ambition..- 

“Verily I laughed many a time over the weak- 
lings who thought themselves good because they 
had lame paws." 

Nietzsche 


THE D. P. ISSUE: 


An interesting headline appeared in several of 
our metropolitan newspapers recently concerning 
the fact that 50,000 jobs, and 50,000 homes had 
been prepared for the arrival of D.P. immigrants 
from Europe. This policy endorsed by the na- 
tional politicians leaves out, as usual, considera- 
tion of both American veterans and the average 
civilians, not to mention thousands of young 
people who are waiting for apartments to start 
out in married life. Of course we really can’t 
expect these knights of the debating table to take 
an interest in mere common Americans when 
they have a chance to cater to the organized 
voting blocs of the minority groups, whose news- 
papers poured forth hosannahs of praise for this 
piece of D.P. legislation. A wounded boy from 
the American merchant marine recently wrote 
to one of our larger New York newspapers telling 
• how he had to leave a Navy hospital to make 
room for the arrival of D.P.’s. 

Even if these emigrants from Europe were 
desirable citizens, a matter of very dubious 
aspects, it would not excuse this treatment of 
the American people, who after all are the ones 


who pay for the political swill pail on which the 
Washington bureaucrats feed. The facts are, 
however, that these emigrants are branded as 
undesirables in the lands of their birth due to 
treasonable activities. Most of them were inmates 
of European prisons and outright advocates of 
Communism, Socialism and similar Marxist move- 
ments. Once they gain the right to vote, the left 
wing parties in American will experience the 
necessary surge of strength to carry them to 
power. No wonder Stalin can afford to wait, with 
typical Asiatic patience, when he knows that the 
cancer of Communism is daily gnawing at the 
vitals of our nation. Every influx of so-called 
refugees hammers another nail into the coffin of 
American freedom. Furthermore if these refugees 
desired work, there is far more opportunity in 
war devastated Europe than in America where 
plenty of young G.I.’s are out of jobs. We ask 
you America, Who comes first, refugees and ex- 
jailbirds who have been kicked out of Europe 
or American boys who proved their loyalty and 
devotion to America? This may not mean much 
to politicians but we think the average American 
wifi know what we mean. 


ANIMISM AND PRIVATE ENTERPRISE: 


The Marxist agitators, both in the streets and 
through the minority controlled press, shriek 
daily a host of imprecations against the National 
Association of Manufacturers and so-called Wall 
Street monopolists. This is the same pattern used 
by the Marxists in foisting a Socialist regime on 
the British Empire, although the now victorious 
Socialist standard bearers of that hapless land do 
not hesitate to whine and plead for further loans 
from this den of reaction, as they like to term 
the U. S. A. 

The facts are comparatively simple. Marxism 
always attempts primarily to gain control of the 
national labor force through domination of criti- 
cal posts in the labor unions. Having accom- 
plished this task, the racial minorities who fur- 
nish the intellectual power behind Marxism, seek 
to create class hatred by stirring up the workers 
against management and vice verse. Indeed, they 


do raise the worker’s wages, providing they don’t 
mind spending one quarter of their time march- 
ing- on picket lines and paying exorbitant dues to 
finance the political and social campaigns of 
these minorities, but the part the worker is not 
told concerns the fact that everytime wage boosts 
are granted, the employers are forced to raise 
the prices on their commodities. What does a 
worker benefit if in receiving five dollars more a 
week, the commodities of food, transportation 
and general cost of living rise simultaneously. 
This benefits only the Marxist labor bosses who 
seek to create a depression in our great nation, 
during which calamity the grim and bloody 
shadow of the hammer and sickle will descend 
upon America as it has done upon Europe and 
Asia. 

The National Renaissance Party is, through the 
philosophy of Animism, devoted to the promulga- 


U-'_ 


tion of a renascent Capitalist viewpoint. The 
workers of America can rise to greater heights 
as champions of tneir nation's destiny than as 
tools of racial minorities whose aim is the subju- 
gation of the woricl according to the views of 
their philosophic mentor, Karl Marx. The task of 
the State is to raise the working class to the 
position where ail tneir children may have an 
equal education and enter life thoroughly trained 
for work in his chosen profession. Full employ- 
ment can be assured by means of our proposed 
Ten Year Reconstruction project for the purpose 
of erecting ultra-modem homes at low rentage 
for all our people. One half of the money spent 
by Democratic and Republican parliamentarians 
on European and Asiatic projects would have 
been sufficient to launch this campaign at once. 

The labor czars tell American workers about 
the vast benefits which they have made possible 
for them but where are these benefits? The labor 
czars repeatedly praise the U.N., which would 
nullify the existence of the U. S. A. as a separate . 
national entity and replace it with a world gov- 
ernment dominated by the Soviet Union by virtue 
of her right of veto in that world debating club. 
Furthermore, the U.N. body on world social rela- 
tions have come up with the typical Marxist 
drivel that it will be considered perfectly all right 
if white. Christian girls should marry with 
Negroes, Mongoloids and God knows what else. 
Obviously we are far more careful with the breed- 
ing of our livestock and pets than we are with 


g tr 


our own race of mankind or do we suppose that 
God, creating man in the image of himself, en- 
visioned himself as a mulatto or similar half 
breed. 

As to whether private enterprise is persecut- 
ing the American worker, let us look at the 
record. .The great housing developments for em- 
ployees such as Stuyvesant Town, Peter Cooper 
and many others were erected by such corpora- 
tions as the Metropolitan Life Insurance Com- 
pany and New York Life Insurance Co., but I 
fail to see anything similar being done by the 
labor union bosses despite the vast sums which 
they expect as tribute from hard working Ameri- 
cans. On the contrary, the racial minorities are 
agitating against these corporation built develop- 
ments because the management and tenants re- 
fuse to have Negroes from Harlem move into their 
homes with them. Perhaps the editor of the “New 
York Star,” formerly “P.M.,” who is constantly 
agitating on such matters, would care to have a — 
bevy of Negroes move into his home. “Do unto 
others, as you would have others do unto you.” 

Of course the “New York Star” calls itself a 
liberal paper, but we’ve heard that term before. 

Private enterprise has been the backbone of 
American defense and the envy of the European 
and Asiatic people for one reason, namely, that 
it has raised our production and living standards 
to heights undreamed of in these economically 
backward states. 


WHAT WE STAND FOR: 


The National Renaissance Party has been 

created for the following purposes: 

1. To organize a voting bloc of American citi- 
zens of Finnish, German, Latvian, Esthonian, 
Lithuanian, White Russian and Latin extrac- 
tions to oppose the flood of Marxist ideologies 
in America and to act as a counterweight to 
the racial minority voting blocs. 

2. The erection of the National Re nais sance 
Party as a political force in its own right, to 
wrest control of America from the cowardly 
middle class parties who have become instru- 
ments for electing candidates satisfactory to 
the minority races but hostile to the interests 
of the great mass of the American people. 

3. To organize the power of American industrial 
interests in a campaign to educate the great 


mass of the American people, in particular the 
workers and win them back to their race and 
nation through the medium of a vast educa- 
tional campaign to be launched by the Na- 
tional Renaissance Party. 

4. To expose the truth behind World War n by 
making known the insidious chicanery of the 
New Deal regime in driving this country into 
war on behalf of the minority races, who had 
driven the nations of Central Europe into a 
state of righteous fury against the slow moral 
poisoning of their people. We are experiencing 
the same sensations in America at present 
resulting in vicious sex crimes, sex orgies be- 
tween Negroes and teen age white girls in 
Minnesota and the rising tide of pornography 
and sexual degeneracy as depicted in our 
literature, films, art and music. 


The National Renaissance Bulletin is published at 224 East Main Street, Beacon, N. Y. 

Editor — James H. Madole. 


Enclosed you will find my contribution of $5-$10-$50-$100-$500, for the purpose of aiding the edu- 
cational drive among labor, church and civic groups. I understand that this money will be used for 
educational purposes. This literature may be ordered in wholesale lots at a discount by business firms, 
and organizations with large mailing lists. Individual subscription rates to the bulletin are $3 per year! 

Subscribe now for yourselves and your friends. 




NATIONAL RENAISSANCE BULLETIN 


FEBRUARY, 1949 


Official organ of the National Renaissance Party devoted to Animism, a philosophy 
based on the values of individual personality, private enterprise and government 

by the intellectual elite. 

“Weaklings praying for miracles to make easy the path their own wills should clear. Beggars 
who whine for alms from dreams. Shirkers each struggling to place upon his god the burden whose 
carrying and whose carrying alone can give him strength to walk free and unafraid, himself god- 
like among the stars.” 

“For how long a time in the history of the earth has man been master of it? For a breath — 
for a cloud’s passing. And will remain master only until something grown stronger wrests mastery 
from him — even as he wrested it from his ravening kind — as they took it from the reptiles— -as did 
the reptiles from the giant saurians — which snatched it from the nightmare rulers of the Triassic — 
and so down to whatever held sway in the murk of earth dawn.” “Life! Life! Life! Life everywhere 
struggling for completion!” 

“Life crowding other life aside, battling for its moment of supremacy, gaining it, holding it for 
one rise and fall of the wings of time beating through eternity — and then — hurled down, trampled 
under the feet of another straining life whose hour has struck.” 

“Life crowding outside every barred threshold in a million circling worlds, yes, in a million 
rushing universes; pressing against the doors, bursting them down, overwhelming, forcing out those 
dwellers who had thought themselves so secure.” 

A. Merritt, 

The Metal Monster 

NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PRESS ASSOCIATION: 


The National Renaissance Party, as one of the 
two existing Nationalist parties in the United 
States, is seeking to establish a greater degree of 
cooperation and joint effort among pro-National- 
ist publications here and abroad. The success of 
the venture we are undertaking depends entirely 
on the willingness to cooperate of the editors of 
these publications. Since 1933 we have all been 
sadly lacking in that spirit of comradeship and 
common effort towards a common goal which has 
been responsible, not only for our failure to attain 
political victory but also- our failures to prevent 
the repeated victories of the Marxists. For once 
let’s bury the hatchet of petty jealousies and an- 
tagonism and work together. If each Nationalist 
editor will read this and then appoint himself as 
a self appointed committee of one to carry but 
his or her part of the bargain, we can stop com- 
plaining about our enemies and start rolling up 
political victories ourselves. Let’s borrow a leaf 
from the Marxist book and learn how to work to- 
gether^ for a Nation alist lea der in the White 
■House mT9S2. We will all find this more valuable 
than harping on petty issues and back biting each 
other. The Red Press in New York has admitted 
time and again that the one thing it fears is 
Nationa list unity such as camp ffl^rmeny qndgr 
~HitIffrSpam~ unde r , Franco",, etc._ 

Now here is the plan. We are developing a 
National Renaissance Press Ass ociation, no dues 
whatsoever are required; ]ust cooperation on the 
part of each editor, here and abroad. Here is 
what each editor taking part in this press associ- 
ation will be required to do: 


Once a month each editor will reserve a page 
for the National Renaissance Press Ass’n. On 
this page will be placed, the name of each 
publication, foreign and domestic, supporting 
the Press Association, the name of its editor 
the mailing address, and a review of the par-, 
ticular work carried on by each publication. 
By this means every publication participating 
will have a chance to greatly increase its cir- 
culation and the number of its subscribers. No 
matter how many or how few subscribers you 
have at present, each editor stands to gain by 
his cooperation. Furthermore the Nationalists 
who read these publications will be given an 
expanded view of the nation-wide as well as 
the International Front on which the death 
struggle between Marxism and Nationalism 
is being waged. 

All editors participating in the National Ren- 
aissance Press Association will exchange their 
publications each month. 

All editors participating in the press associa- 
tion will, inasmuch as they are affiliated to no 
political party, support the National Renais- 
sance Party in such national functions as tak- 
ing up petitions for redresses of local, state or 
national grievances imposed by Red statesmen, 
advertising important mass meetings, etc. In 
fact, whenever we hear of Nationalist meet- 
ings anywhere we should all cooperate, to the 
best of our ability, to make them a success. 
Each editor cooperating in the National Ren- 
aissance Press Association wiii give space to 
our Nationalist allies who have publications 
functioning overseas. 


w 


9 


• It is the lack of ability, the foolish placidness 
or misguidance that has caused our people to 
take no notice of the false -tactics of these racial 
pressing groups? We are in very great need of 
a racial organization, for our people, to protect 
us from the liberty destroying actions of these 
racial pressure groups. It is time that we give 
up complaining and aot as one people to work for 
our own race by means of the United Caucasian 
Organization, which incorporates the following 
organizations: — 

1. A Law Body — The Caucasian Congress to 
legally defend the racial rights of all our 
people throughout the United States. 

2. An Educational Body — The Caucasian Educa- 
tional Center to give our people the true 
Caucasian Anthropological knowledge of our 
race. 


3. A true united Christian Church, the Caucasian 
Christian Church devoted to uniting our 
divided Christian Caucasian people into a true 
Caucasian Christian Brotherhood. The Cau- 
casian Christian Church only believes in the 
New Testament and all contributions are used 
to spread Christianity among our bewildered 
and divided people. 

4. The Financial Body — The Caucasian Founda- 
tion to whom you will please make your con- 
tributions in order to conduct our fight to 
make our people free racially from dictator- 
ship, coercion and exploitation. 

Your contributions may be sent to The Cau- 
casian Foundation, c/o Mr. James H. Madole, 
National Director, National Renaissance Party. 
224 East Main St., Beacon, N. Y. 

Harry E. Reynolds, Director. 


ATTENTION SUBSCRIBERS! 

Beginning next month we will have a brief print excerpts from your letter, 
readers column, carrying highlights from your Remember, also, to get your subscriptions in 
letters. Queries as to where you can obtain as this always helps in carrying out our work to 
certain literature or any other material will be reach thousands of new Americans each month 
printed, but only with your permission to let us and convert them to a Nationalist way of life. 


TRUTH ABOUT THE WAR TRIALS: 


The courageous American editorial writer, 
John O’Donnell, came out on January 10th with 
a smashing expose of the inhuman treatment im- 
posed on German prisoners of war in the so- 
called war crimes trial. Mr. John O’Donnell 
records the statement of Judge Edward LeRoy 
Van Roden of Orphan’s Court, Delaware County, 
Pa., who was part of a commission studying 
methods used by the American prosecutors at 
the recent Lachan trials. We quote: “The state- 
ments which were submitted as evidence were 
obtained from men who had . first been kept in 
solitary confinement for three, four and five 
months. They were confined between four walls, 
with no windows, had no opportunity to exercise. 
Two meals a day were shoved into them through 
a slot in the door. They were not allowed to talk 
to anyone. They had no communication with 
their families or any minister or priest during that 
time.” 

“This solitary confinement proved sufficient 
in itself in some cases to persuade the German to 
sign prepared statements. These statements not 


only involved the signer, but often would involve 
other defendants. 

“The investigators would put a black hood 
over the accused’s head and then punch him in 
the face with brass knuckles, kick him and boat* 
him with rubber hose. Many of the German de- 
fendants had teeth knocked out. There were also 
broken jaws.” 

Mr. O’Donnell performed a great service in 
getting out the facts. In summing up the means 
used by American prosecutors (New Deal Civil 
Service Type) , Mr. O’Donnell states that accord- 
ing to Judge Van Roden the following means 
were used: 

“Posturing as priests to hear confessions and 
giye absolution; torture with burning matches 
driven under prisoner’s fingernails; conduct of 
mock trials with a crucifix on table and lighted 
candles; beatings and brutal kicking which per- 
manently destroyed the male reproductive organs; 
knocking out teeth and breaking jaws; solitary 
confinement and near starvation rations; denial of 
all spiritual solace by Catholic or Protestant 
chaplains.” 


The National Renaissance Bulletin is published at 224 East Main Street, Beacon, N. Y. 

Editor — James H. Madole. 

We wish to take this opportunity to thank those of you who sent in donations and subscrip- 
tions last month. Our reaching hundreds of new Americans every month with the truth and 
soliciting their membership is similar to the battlefront wherein we are the front line soldiers and 


«* 




i 7^? above outline for immediate action can 
* i? „ the n ? assin § of American Nationalist 
strength toward a common victory. It is far from 
complete and we welcome all suggestions and 
queries but let each editor devote one page next 


.month to announcing the start of this campaign. 
Our March issue will show how many publications 
signed up for action. In short, let’s stop talkine 
and start acting. K 


Jesus Christ said: ‘‘Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free” —St John vm-^2 
Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. -What therefore God teth ioried tS5i£ 
(one Aryan Caucasion race) let no man put asunder” St Matthew <r Rnt +>>*1 

n0t> m0Ved envy ’ to ° k SfbierS 

and gathered a company and set all the city on an uproar.” ’ 

Plato s “? : ‘‘Most of the social and political ills from which we suffer are under our control riven 
^ V H - f 1 ?. C0 ^ ra Se to change them, you can live in another and wiser fashion if ’you so 
t0 «”" k Jt out “d work it out. You are not awake to your own power ’’?K the 
teaching that has yet to soak into the intelligence of the Caucasian race. 


CAUCASIANS AWAKE 


The Caucasian people of the United States are 
an energetic and progressive people descended 
rrom various European nationalities composed of 
JNordic, Alpine and Mediterranian racial groups, 
■they fled from religious and nationalistic oppres- 
sion and sought in the United States a haven of 
liberty, justice and a Caucasian life for their race. 
They have much to be complimented for in the 
creation of this great nation and the amazing 
scientific progress they have made, but there are 
two things they have not accomplished. First— 
the full use of a progressive racial knowledge of 
Caucasian Anthropology and second— the ability 
to cooperate as one racial people in order to solve 
the problems and right the wrongs, which are 
being daily gathered and committed against them, 
both as a group and as individual members of the 
Caucasian race by Pressure Groups representing 
other races. 

We must have a full racial knowledge of our- 
selves and our people in order to be a free pro- 
gressive people. There can be no ignorance or 
madness in a true racial knowledge of Caucasian 
Anthi opology. Rather it is the highest civilizing 
peak we can ever hope to reach and is the great- 
est uniting instrument for the welfare of our 
people. It is the only means of overcoming 
religious division and confusion. It is the only 
untried means of overcoming nationalistic exploi- 
tation and destruction. 

We may rant and complain about the constant’ 
wars, bad government, labor antagonism, child' 
delinquency, divided Christian Churches, etc., but 
how are we ever going to solve Our problems as 
a divided people? Yes a divided Caucasian people 
divided into different religious factions (the 
religion of Brotherhood), divided sectionally into 
a North and a South (by the famous Northern 
Jr ^ ur ^. ain socalled Anti-racial propaganda) 
divided into different national factions and 
divided into clashing classes and social groups. 
Some weak ones among us seem only able to be 


dragged together in order to work for other races 
against their own people. When do we ever 
expect to work together for the good of our own 
race and our own beliefs? 

Both parties in the last election attempted to 
impress upon the Caucasian people in the United 
States that such issues as racial privileges granted 
un der the socalled Civil Rights laws and the so- 
called FEPC acts were the basis of freedom for 
other races, whereas- these racial laws and acts 
are the basis of privilege for other races and the 
very means for the exploitation of our race. Both 
parties were forced to call these issues to the at- 
tention of. our people continuously in order to 
appease vile pressure groups representing such 
racial groups as the National Association for the 
Advancement of Colored People, an association 
™dcr the control of half breed Negroes, whose 
mad desire is to control all the Caucasian people 
m the United States by means of liberty destroy- 
ing Negro racial preference laws. This organiza- 
tion is m full cooperation with the Anti-Aryan 
Caucasian group, the Anti-Defamation League of 
Bnai Brith (defamers of all they cannot exploit 
and OTslave ) The Anti-Defamation League of 
Bnai Brith, The Jewish Congress, the Negro Con- 
gress and the National Association forThe A^ 
vancement of Colored People, all control and 
support the racial pressure groups, which are do- 
ing so much to Communisticize our government 
our educational system, our Churches, our labor 
unions and our industries. They have even gone 
so far as to undermine and Communisticize our 
military forces by having racial anti-Caucasian 
preference laws enacted for other races in our 

“S?/ “ d nav £ Th ®Y have as their motto: 
Prevent the Caucasian people from knowing 
their racial abilities from the cradle to the grave 

w T® I!? 11 *? e their master s.” Their lobby in 
Washington known as “The Black Cabinet” is 
busy bribing and threatening every Caucasian 
leader m our government into turning upon and 
dividing our people. e ^ a 


? 


* 


you are the loyal home front who send us the weapons; with which to drive Marxism from the hearts 
and minds of our people. If everyone will pitch in and help, our membership rosters will continue 
to grow. Every American who joins the National Renaissance Party helps to create a potent 
political force to act as a balance against the voting blocs of the racial minorities. Send in your 
three dollar membership dues today and help to distribute literature to your friends. If you cannot 
contribute financially to this campaign, send in as many three cent stamps as possible to help the 
crusade. Every stamp means one more American will receive a packet of informative literature. 

. Enclosed you will find my contribution of $5, $10, $50, $100, $500, for the purpose of aiding 
in the educational campaign. I understand this money v ill be used for educational purposes. This 
literature may be ordered in wholesale lots by firms and organizations. Individual subscription 
rates to the bulletin are $3 per year. 

Subscribe now for yourself and your friends. 



FD-71 


Subject's Name and Aliases 


Address of Subject 

JBC. MAT. 


Character of Case 
DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: 



Name of Complainant 


Address of Complainant 



D^te and Time Complaint Received 


FACTS OF COMPLAINT: 














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ACTION RECOMMENDED BY AGENT: 


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JEMAL SECURITY - X ffJ^P 


• February 1 ?, 194 ? 


V 


'A' ; •: ,; ■■ " , „ 

\ * ‘ to the Bureau dated ITovenbsr 15>j 1?48> entitled, 

“^®S4 « copy of *&* *« io^d to tH; ' 

w'tar*. bffijjif. , '• •■ ■’ 

i* 


L'tS for &y futtrof?aeeIsHi. n The original copyef^^S^let^rwae - . , lifc 

f fLlL’&fcroit Wto* an-jaeewber .8* XS*> the. case ..eat* . . k 

M H- nmmiAh SECBRITT-X.'* '• 4 . , \ ■-.•■.;■• . 

ftUi*lSMa ««*> 

under the date of January 16, 194?, to Kao^A^Atiu. . 

Se^atidmry of the ^tiohal Renaissance Party,, T?iiich 

^Sjll^iuarterei e/m$ Granite ; Street, , SaXSfiffS^ 

resident* This letter refers to, the Countessjfolst syG aee ap ... 

^ ’'she has tritten to Philadelphia*. The contents of. rv^' 1 !. <..■•*'*.' 

-A. .4*-. **»•. bt the- Philadelphia Qffto** V: 


letter'.; of January ***. hein^ for warded 

■W: t#(the%W?Yorh .and Detroit Offices;...- ‘ . "*’ V-- ' ■ ' , 


'es^2?*S® 


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STANDARD FORM NO. 64 t 


~ Office' Memorandum • united states 

*'•' .. ' — r„K. r - - - 


SAC, NEW YORK. 

^ <* 

SAC,- PHILADELPHIA ^ 


jBMfPTAl 


DATE: 


subject^>^ tional ssH&ZSSANCas PARTY 
■' INTERNAL SECURITY - X 




M * 


■I M*- ? 


SCHEIDT 

— -ILii. Cv.-i.wl It 

ZaAZ\ vxLLB i 

Jui|;;23l.-#g| SSAlJIiT 

- B- r -YNIHAN 
■--- ~NE 

IVIoilAfiJPERVISOR 

r — KJR. w7i\N 

^ >NON 

\-IMr3v V^cjuT b2 


’ /C/ P ■ n E ?yyyv dz 

Confidential Informant l aovised SB |on b6 

that WILLIAM H. MacFARLAND, Director of the Nationalist Acti^'tlpiif 1 ^ hie 
had attended a meeting in the Bronx at 183rd Street recently unet^ j 
exact date of this meeting was not given. * r I 


MacFARLAND indicated that this meeting was quite a bit different than those 
generally he^a in Philadelphia, and that while it was not too rough, there 
were times^/hen he was a little fearful. According to MacFARLAND, JAMES 
H. M&DOIJJp Director of the National Renaissance Party, has organized about 
two hundred persons, most of whom are elements of the Old. Christian 
Front . 


With reference to the meeting held at 183rd Street, MacFARLAND pointed 
jout .that it y/as 'orderly until, some people of Jewish extraction started 
to call names ana one^6f the*members of .the National Renaissance Party 
lost his head and attempted to strike, one of the hecklers. This person 
v/as stopped from doing so when the •'policeman assigned to maintain order 
broke up the meeting at that point. ? 

The speakers at this* meeting r W£'re EacE^ fAND, and an 

individual identified only as | P Among the hecklers, J^cFaRLAHD 

pointed out,- were 250 members of jthe Jewish War Veterans and these war 
veterans asked MacFARLAND a number of vicious questions and he indicated 
that he had some, trouble during this period. 

He pointed out. howeV erT that when the questioning got to intense, 

[ who is 

| took care of the questioners and advised them to stop asking any_ 
questions. 

With reference to | MacFARLAND mentioned that j | has only two 

pastimes — one of which is collecting suppressed books'-., and the other is 
working for the National Renaissance Party. 

105-392 

cc: U.A.L. 105-426 UTEwSpqBJ--— & 


"/ATS. 


msimw msT&mom 




FBI . NEW YORK/ 

=^«4494alj 


SAG, NEW YORK 


July 25, 1949 


MacFARLAND pointed out that he and JAMES H. MAU^LE had discussed a proposed^ 
merger of the National Renaissance Party and the Nationalists Action League ^ 
when MADOXS had been in Philadelphia. As yet, there is no basis for a merged, 
according to MacFARLAMD, but he did point out that they did agree on terms 
for close cooperation. 

MADOLE, according to MacFARLAND, has a very specific program worked out and 
will not deviate from that program one inch, and this is thegreason that 
merging with his organization would be most difficult for the Nationalist 
Action. league . 

In describing HADOIE to the informant, MacFARLAND stated that Tfft mng i s a 
very well educated, but not an impressive looking individual. He is quite frail; 
however, he has the power to hold and control the people in New York. HADOLE 
was also described as a person who had a Prussian background and believed in 
the aristocracy of the country and the fact. that this country should be ruled 
by the intelligently elite, rather than by the average person who is able to 
vote. 


With referen ce to- the individual identified only as | | above, MacFARLAND 

advised that | | i s the only one who is carrying on the Christian Front 

work. 

- .b6 

~ - hlC 

The above is submitted for your information. 


- 2 - 











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IN REPLY, PLEASE REFER TO 


FD-71 

(7-30-46) 


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literal 2£«ram nf 3htunaft5af tntt 


COMPLAINT FORM 


NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTI 
Subject's Name and Aliases 


Subject's Name and Aliases JA , » Name of Complainarit 

/oo -/o u I I 

/ 0 er~ / <5 / Address of Complainant 

87th Street, between 2nd and 3rd A venues 

Address of Subject New York 0ity_ r/^ k Telephone Number of Complainant 

Internal Security f \ jjf It / 12:15 AM, 10/8/49 

Character of Case Date and Time Complaint Received 


DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: 


FACTS OF COMPLAINT: Complainant telephonically advised that he had attended a meeting 
of captioned organization on October 7j 1949, at which approximately 145 persona were 
present. According to complainant this is a Fascist group. He stated the officers were 


as follows: JAMES MADOLE, Director; | 


At the meeting attendedl 


advised that the organization's 


philosophy was personal "animism” and government by the intelligent elite. The organization 

plans to attack political street corner meetings of all kinds by the use of stone-throwing 
and other forms of violence, MADOLE resides at 224 East Main Street, Beacon, New York, 


Subsequent to this cal] 


] visited this building and spoke with the Sergeant of the / 


Guards on duty. He left the attached material with the guard. 


ACTION RECOMMENDED BY AGENT: 






fggils 


4 " * 


G#r S~ 1S4* 

tioiiTED TO 


Special Agptnr Em P lo 3 ree 


*• - , . . .» » V- - y. : • ~ ' : ’ ''-1 , limes he'ispeakii of being “Mb pet' 

■J - *. - ■ .& HARRS HENDERSON^. J; • • v i ‘ •/. *%$**£ t5^ rls< ~ ' •'» ' 

^S’ ' y* ' 

odnts of a “swaggering, (l town- stoo - d for government by' the “m- W%$mk^W^4'< .-:*/ , Jjism gtreet, He admitted ne ao^ 

dlrled’' <fames^H. MadoleV leader Vellectual eUto ” , * . .a^,^ %*J&'&6€Cfc JV#^ /TWCC . ■ 

f the Nazi-like .Natmnal Kenais-^ He 5 p ea ks very, rapidly, From - ~ . /f^iTvr* ‘ - ' * much 

nnce Party.* claiming before L , a tlme fQ fuj-g IjIs hand smooths his ’ ✓! *«•';-: 1 . / , to attiact such nnanciai aia, mucu 

Hilddfclphia audience i that he hair , nis eye;: do not look at you : ' ^ 70?lCC& ,as Hitler did - 1 • Germany - 

elped organize- the' riots at the ? glassfiy-stare’ beyond you, - f / v - Circularized Red Trial Jurors ' 

aul.: Robeson Peekskill concerts. When he's about to make a point, • t s ' v V ; *1A 1 / , Madole told me that when the 

e ; reportedly said: % . his. eyes gleam.. After ^he j has ^made rfa vf,Otlk ' names and addresses of the jury 

"I -was 'very proud to have had lt , a sly smne crosses his f ace.He Jb**2k££fc^' - ««’• W - -T T-T' J panels for the trials of the 11 Com- 
part in organizing it, ; walks in a stiff, S ^^” er ; — ' r-v— munist leaders were published- be- 

“It was 3,000 veterans against holding himself so erect tnat-some - . - - _. . * A « tvnipal leaflet ‘distributed in fore the trial, he sent each pro- 

2;000 Jews.;, and.3, 000 veterans times MMIOMS'S^ St* ‘ ’ ' Sective juror’ a copy of Ms anti- | 

iESSflrUS^SCM “ <•» &i -(('■•■jsfiySRjS the ,«.»!! .«.■» ,.;.*■■$ ■ jKS3.b£%XS* **T5r 

at 222 _E, -Main St,. a large- vddte. his m^h^ wm prMe t h e peekskill !£te a® aims of the National a violent anti-Semite. . . fT* man friend. He tries to appeal to. 

framehouse part- y P , ^ ^ first visit, he seemed Renaissance - Party and’ found it <jhe Best Scientific Minds' veterans, although he is not one 

con, This vas.it. - ^ frightened ^ and proud. I said ^af suppus'ed to be about Peeks- ,f Sieves “animism* .would himself. He c^WS jmembem to 

■Thin, Ancmip and 22 . _ the papers had reported that- he kill . so " had *to say something ci: ^e a scientific society ruled^by the Eronx. In ^ ork .^ lle 1 ^ e G ^f 

\ * Ma&ole- turned out to^be a thin claimea in -Thiladelphia tc .have about ^PeekskiU. Tjat isfees«ond the be g t scientific minds, and no Pi*edJW i^SbeShin 


‘ *. V>‘' \ T *r ''' ' *' ' V of other natfonaiistic,' fascist lead- 

* ' A ' r* ;» ;y ; - - - -*/„ they cannot -succeed without Wall 

' J ^ j ' £**' * ' / / V ■' ; : ^/f Street, 7 ’ He' admitted, he does -pot 

&/ V&l fT have any, big industrialist backers 

- . t hut he quite obvlodsly hopes ■ 

■-' ■■-■■. ■■•'7 " , - to attract sufh Snanoial aid. much 

yotae# - as Hitler dld l • Ga " ■ . ■ • 

r - Circularized -Red Trial Jurors ' 

' \. 1 ’ *7A ^ A / ’ ' Madole told me that when the 

-• itt rZetV' , 6z>0*tfc fcwty* ' names and addresses of the jury 
'■ . ; , t „ ■ r _ ^ ^ ^ —j - panels for the trials of the 11 Com- 

*^-*^*^ munist leaders were published' be- 

MADOLE’S'WCTpREjte d^Uyed on a typical leaf let 'distributed in 

the Yorkville section of New York city. . - . Semitic, anti - Marxist “National 

, , y , , .. . Renaissance Bulletin ” “ -r, 


@c 

ift 'Jtfyv- 


* - • V both' frightened and proud. 1 sam was supp nsed to D.e aoouv ; He believes ^animism” would mmseu. xxc ^ u . l “X 2 u L 7 “J 

Thin, Anemig and %Z>. . * ^ the papers had reported that he killi S o " had vto say something ^te a scientific society ruled^by the Eronx. In ^ ork .^ lle 1 ^ e G ^f 

i- - Madole- turned out to’ be a thin clab J e a in 'Philadelphia to have abo ut PeekskiU. * 3 jat is the swond J b e best scientific minds, and no W<* ed rl^memb eiShin 

:“-ES-sSSKSaSrS “.5f'gKSffiw“o“ IK-SlSa-SSSi. SS!KS!»5S1 ^.«.b>S 

*0«S5 alas: sssatfsasesss 


ranemic-iuoR-iug *•«* neipea ors»m*c 

fers from chronic ; asthma ana true? , . ■ 

cannot- stand too much excite- “\y e u . . . a fe 
merit, - On seeing him, you know ( me mhers of the i 
instantly that this wispy person S3n ce Farty). may 
-did not prganize the Peekskill vlo- bll ^ j C an u inhke a 
ilence. most he, might have . on that.” c ' 
dreamed hcv did. Madole actually Ras he.been sr 


; ivxcr uiiu.ii'.i 

7 he said somewhat bitterly. 


“Well . . . a fe.. of our, fellows handbills read: “Hear the ]evG i he j s f or private enterprise, Mertig, head ot tne pra-wazi 'om7 

(members of the National Renais- st ^ 0 ?the Red riot at Peekskill, {he open shop, reindustrialteation ” 1 

sancePartyimay have beenthere Ijgjabylto.mdole^hose^oup of Germany and Japan, friendship to ; a ®?^ e, y“ n e fc tSSSh C. 
butIcan’‘-Ake.anydefmitequote " . ,? old the Beds.m.check!- ^th. Spain. : - 


sancePartyimay have Been tnere, ^tojabylto-mdole^hose^oup of Germany and Japan, menasmp “= chrilra Front through C. 
buUcan-i^eauydefm.tequote “ ped hold the, : Red?.m..che<£! ^.Spain. : ./ M h “ite fom^Stor! 

.115 5-SSS^KwSE SSU“ .5 IS 


^ seems to be to a trance gs ey^ w?ite Piains Grand. Jury myesn- aava,^ — iTi ^ e h cf_ - fS ;^ ti Sem i ti o. anti- Na St A ttend 

f SaS?SK attracting a largm-qrowd and' con- demoCTatic^pwstitoOTiSMdii^hs gj« S0 Na c fims , members Jn .the 
jerks.. cs |j^ ; ^^^-to peeksUll nv ,^Kis ^I^i^CTivedV^ri!’ ^ra^out'scteice’timt^S^ f“P. South - P^ticularly. in At- 

^rajs?“ .«.»«. - • ■ 

rHISiSaS'2 iSSS SSi-? ffTf » g® a«Sar»*8rta^^s^ Jsat •»«** ans 

S u ab ^vp fU rnidDDed with a few version of how he, came to claim by the intellectual elite.” He pornography in movies and racial ti ona hst tracts, bundles of which 

°Lrr^ » ',nfT a card teble laden crSit for the riot violence. He said SSYemocracy as -'rule by the fliter-marriage. ' ‘ hereceivesfromvarious national- 

-?^itlc Ste Md S it was- all McFarland-s fault- f ” and . rejects - thert He often speaks of his propam ists for resale , Some 0 f the mate- 
Sa^te®l?'wSTates-'S meaning William H McFarland.- l^ a f de “o C ratic line," wlilchhe) J s being a,-renascent oapitahst dal he . imports from Sweden and 
^leriS^rtion^’ ^ie^ books on:head of the fascist .Nahonalist Ac- 0 ^,?^° e gener ^ ia ia of breaking .program for a-cap^istAmMica. other foreign sources. 

,^V tLt'ihciude “Mein .Kampf"i tlon League of Philadelphia and ,j own a u forms of racial pride andjHe beheves Industry-should be or- xhls woilld-be Fuehrer was bom 

^r&taer“fteveral astononw -whomMadolerecenW raadePenn- ?£' V g e neral Idea of mongrellzation ^anized into monopolistic truste so Brooklj m. His father and mo-.. 

C0H4d^_0f«hc. +hot .^^r n Sont thescl,and ; Tire Hnitedljations reflects --pa ; |rushed m 


that ■^rS^tont theschand 


that ""small; 
* crushed in 


(Continued on Magazine 15 ) ■ 








‘ - 







(Continued from Magazine 1) 
ther separated when he was quite 
: yqung. "Of his father, who was 
French, Madole says only: "I don't 
know whether he's alive or dead " 
(1 His asthma developed in Brooklyn 
and his mother moved to the Bronx 
in the hope that a less congested 
\ area would help him. It did not, 
and finally, 10 ^ years ago, she 
moyed to Beacon, believing the 
mountain air' would aid him. 

Meanwhile’ she continued- to 
work as a clerk for a New York 
life insurance company, putting in 
five hours a day traveling, She 
leaves .home at 6 :30 a,m. and does 
nothreturn until af ten 7 pan. 

Studied Astronomy 
Kept weak ua . d thin by his: 
asthma, left alone most of 1 the 
, time, 1 James had no friends and 
few opportunities for making therm 
Tired front work and travel, Mrs. 
Madole seldom went out, made few 
friends. They depended oh one an- 
other for friendship and compan- 
ionship, went walking in the near-, 
by mountains on weekend^. Janies 
had no religious upbringing so that 
1 there was: no opportunity for him 

■ to mike social contacts in church, 
i At school, he kept to himself, Ac- 
j cording to other Beacori boys, ‘‘you 

■ couldn't make friends with him." ; 
y For a while he studied astron- 
:o$iy avidly in his lonely, leisure 
time; then chemistry, setting up' a 

* laboratory in their apartment un- 
’ j til odor' of ; the chemicals \be- 
; came unbearable. Out of his scien- 
i tific interest , came his dream to" 


German Americans! The National Renaissance, Parly and its director! g ,1" 
James H. Madole foughl lor you and your loved ones in Germany, Invest | • /- 
• three cents and place your protest with the Police Commissioner. We fought - |. ; 

Lloryou. you fight for us.^_ I 

APPEAL TO PRO-NAZIS is strong in throwaway of Madole’s Na-< ra- 
tional Renaissance Party. ' , • ■'* . ' v ^ f : 

- * » , *\ 

create a, "scientific" society, ruled quently to -see friends /like John // 
by the intellectual elite. ' . Howland Snow, author;of the/'The £ ; 

Mrs. Madole is tall, gray-haired, Case of Tylef Kent " which lis a ^ 
with a distracted air and the same pro-fascisfr explanation’ of the Kent, -r 
nervous, habit as her son of turn- esse. Kent, a U. S: Embassy, clerk > 
ing The head downward and to the London: during the war, was ; v 
side when' spoken to. She highly convicted of being a Nazi intelli- // 
approves of James' political pro- gence agent. “You have to/ write to /v 
gram and is a rabid anti-Semite, Snow, care of Grand Central An- ;.v. 
expressing her hate in more, emo- nex. He t won’t give his "address, jv 
tional tones than James, sneering ^ ou always have to .meet him in 
at “kosher" meat markets land a restaurant;’,' , , 
blaming the Jews for all ' that's $ m ythe Doesn't Qualify . '/ v - }* 

wrong with the world. /Until J met ' , - * , _ , - > ' r> , 

her, I , could not discover where’ * I asked ifheknew Edward James - 

James had picked ^ up his anti- Smyth e, leader of: the/Protestaht Tv 
Semitism which, ‘tfmlike his mo- War Veterans and now. under m-.; ; 
ther’s, is rationalized as “scieri- dictment m Newark for mail fraud, 
tific " ^ j ' . • “I :would hardly consider that - 

/After graduation, tie ^ent.,to # 

work in. New- York City for. a tex-. : 

tale fii-m - When I.firsfc talked. with 

•him about it,; he said, "It got to Sent le S®iuiSSh he’ dO0^n^‘ / 
be. too much. It was a boring job, 

just writing down orders .all • day, "utJ ,, aB0 ^ T^: 

and what with the commuting' it. e ™, A *? ar - ' *• ' . >, ;-Y 

was too much. Besides, * it '.only . Sometimes Madole visits nation- 
paid .$32 a week:” At this' time he alist friends to PWnatown.-He be- .S,. 
began .to contact nationalist. groups heves. that the National Renais- , , 
and began' to^end out his. own sance Party could ^ help Chiang - 
anti-Semitic literature. His Jewish sovernment, 'adding .u. 

emplqyers, learned o’f his anti-Sem- that?., they .are, well-financed..^ 
itic. activities . and fired ; him by , On my second visit, tasked if I 
telegram. , " ' could take his. picture. 4 He refused, /■■- 

T«K > v t said he would' not co-operate/any j / 

Became a Full-Time Job . • furthe r. .“i’ ha ve talked to , my-;, 

1 He turned then to working full friends in NewYork and;; . * w£ll, 
Time at his hate program; He got, the first time, that's over with, gut j 
failing, lists from other pro-fas- I will not co-operate anymore.| x ' ; : 
ci?t, nationalist leaders, most of One reason he did not- want 
whjqm have been interested for a. picture taken, is that he : sonfe- 
long .time in consolidating their ; times' goes snooping around the J 
scattered forces. I asked how. they offices of liberal and democratic * 
received him-: “Most of them organizations; such as The Society ' - 
looked upon, animism with favor.; f or the "Prevention of World War V/' 
I mean, they’d pat me on the back nj/ The only photograph available T 
and say the future belonged to me ^ reproduced on one of his leaf- : 
and that sort of thing. Most of i e tsv It had> been .refcouche& to ^ 
them realize, their programs will strengthen the jaw Une, t nose and -i 
neyer work and that they are too mouth; only the .glassy eyes- re- ; 
old and so ‘ they are ready to go. main the sanie. . . / • ^ vt 

along” When Ileft, he warned, that if 

Tasked him about Gerald Lt K. j sa id he had organized the riots • 
Smith. “Ah,"- he said, “he always at Peekskill, he would sue. T found' 
drags religion in, T don’t, and be- hirn dressed up in the.khaki; army ’ 
sides f sometimes think he-fnakes shirt and black Tie he weafs when / 
too much of a business out of his he speaks at- street rallies. I asked / 
ideas/’/;;; : \ V- if -he- was.going.to speak, some- ^ 

X What 'did that mean? "Well, so where. “No/' he. said, looking * s - 
I have - feseiyed\hl2itoh^i^ 


STANDARD FORM NO. 64 


TO - ' SAC, NEff YORK _ /- . 

FROM : :• ; SAC , PHILA3DELPHIA • ; / - - 

SUBJECT:* NATIONAL RENAISSANCE -.PARTY 
. • ’ INTERNAL SECtETTY'*- : X - ' • 


i- -uisriTEb-'^rATES government 


DATE: jijiiy 2^ 195>0 


On Jtily 5 * 19^0 PhTladelphia Conf identiaY Inf ormant! [ of. - 7 

; // - taknra /reQi&bilit^^^ Special ‘Bnployee l T , , 

i on .the letterhead of lihe National- Renais^^ce .,. V; 

.// • Party dated February ; 7 l‘' 1950 »" This *■ letter* addressed /’'Dear - ^ 

; » ; MAC (W . . HENRY MAC 1 .FAJRLAND ‘ Jr* the; National tDirector: oi ; d>he 

” . .Nationalist Action League, > 876 . Granite Street^. Philadelphia) , 

- / .-.was signed* JAME^/H. MADOLE*"- ' •/ '/• : ; 

/ T&e letter ^^.;states. ; that ll&DOLE -was subpoenaed for the*Peekskill./ •, 
■t%l v .'Riot "sntenit;' iSoxistd^x^Sle. nat^risd 

against/thO. >Reds. 'ishiph' was, stamped/ as '■:? f , '* 

« The letter also* states ,that |and ' EDWARD A, FLECKEN’t 

a. . OSTEIN are Hbaclc with us ” ‘and states that tne Gerten^iteerican ; / 

/ Republican League* "the .Es;tOfius*;SoCiety, the- German^American^ % 

, Voters Alliance and . the/Nat ional Renaissance Party ; ^e now/con- 
V> ’ • t^piaiing; ’-a "final :aiiianoe, "/ “This /will /mean a merging of •' . 

/ / / •‘‘mailing,. lists; and; contributions' into, one political party,"; /This* '< 
■v ; -/ ? iefter., ends f.-with ,ari ; invitation to/ MA C/’ FARLAND to/ enter. the:. . ' / ; 

, * , /- /’spring campaign"' ih> the election of j [ who is to run 7 

. - ; ~ for Congressman from' the Yorkville District ; s against VITO/- // 

> /marcantonio, ■/ : ;■/./■■■;*. - ! . '. “*• / //;. ///' • •'/ / 

■ 7 *. /This, letter ‘ is ’ being forwarded to - the New York Of fice i for" their 

- xnformataonv . :>/ ^ > .-// ' ■ . -- . ; ^ 1 / • — ; 1 V 


/ /,• ,v -mfG/jmf .. v / 

•-V ' ' ;,v 'v .V /'•/•'/ - : ///. / 

/ / cc. 105^25 ’ (%• ‘ 

//. V/v;/ /•/ ,v. •, .. 4 ? / /i \\ / ... ' y - \ 

r : ’.V. >:' /* /. '.•* - . ^ - :.f‘% . *!*;■'. '/ • 

^ - *- 1 y 1 * ^ l 4 1 jA ^ -F' + - r t s 

' v‘>“- kh r Jp' ' ^ 

:// ■/ //■ ; ;■ ;/ ■/ - 

.DAIS — 3 (K« oi ■ ■ . 


v*v 


f VI- 0 J •/ 






I SEAf?C - 


NO. 64 


SAC, NET YORK 

W^-OJA i SAC, '.PHILADELPHIA 

Object:" NATIONAL. RENAISSANCE PARTY 
.NATIONALIST ACTION LEAGUE - 
INTERNAL SECURITY - Z ■ 


UNITEIX STATES GOVERNMENT 
date: July 26, 1950 : 


On June 7, 1 950 . Confidential Informant! | of known reliability, 

furnished SE I | with a letter on the letterhead of the 

NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY, dated April 18 , 1950, addressed "Dear Mac", . 
-and signed JAMES H. MADOLE. ' On June l5» 1950 the same Informant , • 
furnished SE I |with a similar letter dated June 7,. 1950. 

These. letters are self-explanatory.’ • ' :*■ •? - ■" V. ' . 

It is noted that on the letterhead the Philadelphia ^Headquarters of the 
NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY is given as 8?$ Granite Street,; Philadelphia, 
Pa. This, is the same address as that -of the . NATIONALIST ACTION LEAGUE, 
which has been cited by the Attorney General as being within the purview 
of Executive Order 9^35, and that of W« HENRY MAC FARLAND, Jr«, the 
National; Director of the. NATIONALIST ACTION' LEAGUE. , - ; . - . .. . . ; 

The. New York Office is requested to furnish. Philadelphia with information 
concerning the degree of cooperation and mutual assistance -that may 
.exist between theNATIONAL RENAISSANCE .PARTY and the; NATIONALIST ACTION* 
LEAGUE. ‘ ‘V- • • .. ' -V 


i. - . 

. Enc insures 

RMGjejs 

105-426 




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1950. 



p^^ier /.’ 


\ : ,' • \7'0a Febm*^ 24> 1949/ ; 0©itf^^^ 

'• v - v : \ ''.^^tilable' t& £>& StlfLTAil f AVi&of ite Kip*?, Xork' Off fc& Jeauaiy and 

■ . . -: ; Februa^ 1949, issues of £ publication called; *Tha llitional RenaiSsanoe :■ - 

;.*:> V :*y BaU*td.a^ ^eh'ttopieii.tsTO jfeo-eiiredia^fehstbi ^onp- l I 


. Sheae.wePe \ • y 


b 2 

b 6 

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; ■ - .apparently ..sent/by JA1&S H> mD3LI2# 224 &tafr l&ln. Street y Beacon, tear Yc&kb : ^.yb7D I 

•* 'V ^bb'^s listed afe Edltor-of the publication* ’ iPhQ ^iatr^-.ofl I, :■ V -.-i 

" ! ' *' ' * ■' ' -had appeared in- tfie press', In, Oormeetiop'^ pith ] r : ' • ' 


J a n& she- /„-.' 


?* ft3me : froia thP tt.P'wspapsrs, "foasrsuch as . 

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■*.. •-■. -■• ■• •■ •; 


«s it^e^tedntf Vpference, ' v/,,. ; , V- | 

Zip bub^Md -^ef Ibdt: that -t^:CI^’eir of ?pli.ep ' 




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vftAwwt. . dff^hieh ’ lS 0 G 3 QSi-»'%bbn a 'seriicaf .ih 1 y ' ' v 



The 


y ; ,yof'Affie^ea^ v xab^i&a^r‘ vy :'•; _ .„ ; .,' -Vy, >/'* : , v >; ", . j'. V,;-b '••■ 
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xfio^pbi at - hit ^eddcdt* , d^photoBtatic. % a$jjp of pach : 

,. ., -. - , — ited'^h»r#Ath; 

: : Off ibes> o*espectlveiy»y- - .•’ • ,’.-. ; ; . ■•’• '.',>v :^.-i-y -■',' v;> - v.-:-ry; ;; 

c -'y : /y , : =.y. 

. . 

:^• v5y .- ‘ 4 J teadelphia ' (105-425)^ '0^i'-&)'iA r :.l- y,;|»M4S 

y.; 5 .;: --'4? 


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•"• ;1 Eefc^by t© Oh^rltyfcije^ n 1 : '■ •: ' •• •:''!' ' •. -"V: 

00-^53# -;:'* .r - 


■■ ' :■ ■"• v; ' : Ok July i* 1949, one. 

JH * ■ ' ■*■ ■ ■ 


](belI,evod tobd: 

* "h - _ jt JL _* 


• ' doclaifed, ’’"Tte 
-vV,’.;.- : .Acpo ididg. %>|_ 


.on&— . - -'; b6 

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fed as be£Ugeea. u ; ‘ »- - •. 


„ ,.. , ,,,,, ^vw^vm,*^ v«i ] dlstribated a ^T^c&tiwrt^ Entitled* 7 ; "dhsrfLPidap,. 

3- - .' ■* ' Ams^ici. ^a‘ke^ps^^^dtilJledj^’CoiamonSiensd,« ihs v *> „ 

y*. >y M$xs$mm mm-ss 2%iE$st^to-stra^ 

r 'Beanon/ife# lork*;a^ bar /ihfe; Cpj&ib!&/Sen^ 


In bib ' 3peao)i*t 


bod bbdt -<hlfe was an anti- 


'•■-•=. be 
b7C 


/. *;:. "*.". V* QomM&ak ’$U&itwU T- 3E&$ 'Speech; yef erred t,q %as-,aadd at bl^th fifr.raafc and • ; 

. i ’ '• ' Boston Post Road* Bronx* ITeyr ltork* ~ I "T accbrdlng io. : said-.tMt ' V> •*. 

^-v-ite^had. a; pej^t\to'^ko ii#> * r '/ / ■/■ •(. ■•<'/:' [ -"•/■;/■.' <3 '3*. 3 ; ' 

> -V : :fc v :-/V<.-: . , ' y,3i ^gucb'^' 1949*1 ^inads-aWiiable T|W ^.’;‘;\’b7D 


: >, ;# KMA|SSAlQE'l!ASf%: 224’,-Eabt .^rOet^.gcabOQ C^- , ‘ \':;'h..y !"' $vV 

^ '» J \ ^ ' ■ . ' s* k. “ 1 w.‘~ v -Ck ' '- 1 i ,« » " . ' - ■ % * V 4 ‘ ‘ wfi ■ ", l 1 ' ‘- n _ .i 4* 1 ' **’’’'* - * ’ l - ” ' ‘‘ „'V * ** 


•':.-/ ; v , ^3i*.. .^ho. 

.'.:^*r; “* i -- 


.« f 


■ ^ / ''ilatiomIKoaaibsancfe&allo durie, 1949 ,r ; y/.'T--' '■'•■' 7- *' • 

'■> ^ .^ths. ^opogb^-3ls;AlsQ Isding^dd:-'-.; 'b'- C;; "3’ 

7 ,- :vj ’ -■ -/• ‘Q^^dii^sr Offices*.'' ;-; v 'yi{’TC : ’ :u ^ •'•'*.’ 'w:-v3 .''X'*:,^ 

. “v. ,, ■• \ . •• , -, - 1 .-- , ,•.'' ‘ •■"•" .r , - i ~ , ~ , ■ r -'-'I ~i ~- '*’• ; ••'i 7 ~ 1 I 1 '? 1 * 'n*~"i' ' i ' 1 ” • ’ ( ;‘. vj* .’’ ;y -'- 

A.‘. b : > : ; ; > Oa iDobofer $i I949«. ifenO l k - ‘ ; 

'• ? > - ■ J I •telddhbhod the llfeff. .Xbrk Of fxce .t o inform that; bd had attended * •/,' 

' -‘ .k'fflaetihR bf tiie Miom-BBIJAIS^AKGB PASSED at. mtiSiixmk botweon ^ocbndv;- ’ ’ ’ ' ? 






■ , SAC, Philadelphia . ; ; ‘ , . ’September 8, 19J?0 

■ . SAC, New York ' . ,, , , - . . ■ , ■ • 

: .. 'urnm* mmsmoi 'max - >. “f\ ■■ -V- 

. , ■ NATIONALIST ACTION IEAGUE : -- v V . - 

' ^^rnal SECDR irr r.z. - \ ■' , 

/.-I ■ V / . 7 ■' 

/ 1 Re Philadelphia letter July 26, 1950, . and New Xqrk letter to Phila- 
delphia of July 28, 1950.: l - , . . , ' . f;/ ' 

' ■ .■ . . ■ ; 

• - ' • Philadelphia Office is requested ,i° advise., whether the, information 

.•set forth in| the; New Xd.rk letter of July 'suf'ficient'-S'q^' the purposes of 

the .Philadelphia Office 4a : ’aeS 'J?or^^ df July 26. ' 

. * F^ri the information of ' tiie:; : Phiiadeiphia Division, this office is 
hot conducting any active investigation on the captioned organizations. In 
the. event additional information is desired by Pl&iadelphia, Philadelphia is 
requested to det forth undeveloped leads for New Xork. Pending receipt of 
such request, nq additional action will be taken by: the New Xork ; I)iyision on 
tlds matter.' K * • * ,• .• \ 


T«JMcA:RAA 

i05-1061j. 



KEREIN.IS 

: datbJ1 Lht 




'/fiSA^r . ^ // £- - /£* 






K 1 - , :H - - *- \‘ -* 

e , - f , ■*« *- * * 

* *' ' - '-» I. ' 

STANDARD FORM NO^ 64, :• t ’v'T C ^5Jk " ’ 

. . .'■- v '-■• ■ 

Xr\ rr / ^:SiM®«';; ; '•. rr i 


. r * ./ ; Vi; \V\ <" &7i0?r * ■' ’C-i” i L ' 3 

•.-*"• s - *>^: • 

• ' - ' * : 4 - ;; / ' 


•WMimlf, 


Ji&H-ii 


United stJSes GOVERNMENT' 

*. - -TV' *6^ ’• [ .- -'‘.v*: > * 




V 


SUBJECT; 


w. wnwRV MflftT?AT?T^T®M/nfei v r-- : -x- 


DATE: October’ 3a 1950 


fECT: \ 7 . HE1IRT MacFABMm/3Ri ' ' A Um •••*'. -■ 

NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PAPTYj Zac*^ ' I J^%17 ; ; • ! : ’ - : 

/ INTERNAL SECURITY- - X, :. - OyJ '. ^ ~ *’ ’' ' ’ - .* ’ : - ' 

, -\; : . /' ' ; 7 7- • ‘ 

-, There, is> being forwarded to the New York' Office as an,' : 
enclosure with this letter a letter on the. letterhead of the NATIONAL,. , . • 
v RENAISSANCE PARTY, •'.dated’ Uul^ 20, >1950^ addressed #0 • “Dear >•- 

signed JAMES H. MADOLE. ’ - : \ ’" ’ 

This letter states in part tfa$t - "KURT , piBTIG , s -^oiip 
• merged with ours, and become part of the party financially and - pollf 

' , ■ ■=,. ■;'• . L U -., \ : . ; . ’ V'liVS 

The letter also ‘requests MacFARLAND to arrange to . go- to . ■ 

' - York to. meet ‘MERTIG, and. JIADOLE*- .V 


*t£ v^ n n , ^x* 
f , V - v>- 'T - -' 


*•’. This.letier-.is being sentto'the NevrYork Qffice fo.rinfcirm- 
: ationronlyi‘Jlt is; noted that' W. Jjipiffiflfr- JRi .is 'thei. ; Nation^l ’’ .. 
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the new 82nd Congress must make it the first order of busi- 
ness to stop appropriating money to pay the salaries of all 
these arrogant federal employes who for years past hare 
been insulting the American public and have not only proven 
to be totally inept but even have repeatedly and openly been 
accused, and in some cases even been found guilty of adher- 
ing to Communism. ! 

j 

And this allegation includes not only Acheson, but also 
the last blustering bell hop of the Pendergast clique of office 
holders, 

If President Truman keeps rolling his mind's eye over this teeming 
horde, calculating how they can be used to make him Emperor Harry 
I< now and beyond 1952, without giving thought exclusively to the wel- 
fare af the American people then the U, S. Senate and the House of 
Representatives ought to introduce a joint resolution (just short of im- 
peaching him): 

WHEREAS the American Nation is made up of free and 
■ independent minded citizens and as such are entitled to bow 
what their hired public officials, want them to do in the way of 
• war and sacrifice in the matter of American foreign and 
domestic policy, and j ■ 

WHEREAS President Truman is either unwilling or unable 
to supply specific answers to specific questions within a rea- 
sonable time; !■ 

BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED that the Speaker of the 
House and the President pro tempore of the Senate shall ap- 
point a select joint committee of the two houses for the pur- 
pose of considering and recommending a national foreign 
and domestic policy designed to meet all vital questions 
pressing for the decision by the! American people. 

If. the President can't, then Congress must do the job! 

KURT MERTIG 
New York City chairman 
NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 
; 317 E, 54th St„ New York 22, N.Y. 


Please join the National Renaissance Party and subscribe ’to our 
monthly bulletin; net fee $3.00 (Subscription without membership card 
$2,00 per year.) Send your subscription, membership fee or donation to, 
the National Renaissance Party 224 East Main Street, Beacon, New York 

"LET'S SAVE AMERICA FOR WHITE CHRISHAN-AMERICANS'l 





NATIONAL RENAISSANCE 
BULLETIN 

AUGUST— SEPTEMBER 1950 

Published Monthly at Beacon, N.Y. $2.00 per year 

Official orgcai of the National Renaissance Party devoted to d 
restoration of the American Republic, the preservation of American 


THE JEWISH TROJAN HORSE IN AMERICA! 

America, if given time, can create a strong army, navy and air force 
to defend our people from aggression launched from -without but we are 
hopelessly unprepared to meet a Red stab in the back from within. It 
should be kept in mind that all Red offensives, thus far, have been launch- 
ed from within and the blows have been struck by Native revolution- 
ists as in Czechoslovakia, China and Korea. Like the hapless Trojans 
of Homer's famous classic, the Iliad, the people of these lands have been 
struck down by Trojan Horse tactics, their defenses destroyed by treach- 
ery in their own ranks. 

We were led into war against Germany and Japan for ho other 
purpose than to clear these bulwarks against Communion from the path 
of Russia in Europe and Asia, Franklin D. Rooselvplt, the greatest 
hypocrite of the Twentieth Century supervised these proceedings in 
order to satisfy the Jewish voting bloc in key Eastern industrial cities, 
Anyone who visited the houses of Congress in the critical days of 1940- 
1941 was likely to be mobbed by thousands of delegates from! leading 
Jewish pressure groups centered in New York City and Chicago. The 
purpose of these .groups was to drag Americans into battle lines 
to save the Communist Jews of Europe from: their justly deserved fate 
and to clear the way for Soviet Russia in Europe by using American G, 
I's as innocent dupes to destroy Germany, the bulwark against Russia 

These same Jewish pressure groups are today the leading advocates 
of peace at any price with Soviet Russia. Ten of these Jewish groups in- 
cluding the American Jewish Congress, Jewish War Veterans of the U. S. 
A, and B'nai Brith, have objected to an American loan to Spain on the 
basis that Generalissimo Franco has interfered with religious freedom 
and is therefore a Fascist. Although Spain is one of the leading anti 
Communist nations in Europe, the jews are doing everything possible 
to boycott her government. It is also interesting to observe that these 
Jews sometimes refer to themselves as a religion and sometimes as a 
race, according to which suits their Jconvenience, Thus when DP, quotas 
are set we find Jews entering this counry as Hungarians, Slovaks, Poles, 
Germans etc. monopolizing the qiiotas for other nationalities. They 
get away with this stunt by claiming to be a religion, not a race, though 
in Israel, which they ruthlessly seized from the Arabs, they claim to be' a 
race and enact racial laws, ’ , - 




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Although all the suspects in the atom spy case have proven to be 
Jewish, namely, David Greenglass, Harry Gold, Sidney Weinbaum, 
Julius Rosenberg and his wife, Ethel, Miriam Moscowitz and Abraham 
Brothman; nonetheless our cheap politicians refuse to state the obvious 
fact for fear of being labelled Fascist and having their political careers 
smeared by multi-million dollar Jewish smear groups like the Anti-De- 
famation League of B'nai Brith. Of course our boys in Korea could sit 
down and refuse to fight for fear their careers might be terminated by 
a bullet but to compare our young heroes with American politicians 
is similar to comparing Buckingham Palace with a farmer's manure heap. 

We bow also that the eight New York teachers accused of teach- 
ing Communism in public schools were Jews, so much so that they 
hesitated to employ Theodor Kiendle as their attorney because the law 
firm with which he was associated had no Jewish partners hence they 
feared it was antisemiiic. Judith Coplon was the Jewess convicted of 
handing government secrets over to Valentin Gubitcher, Soviet agent. 

Anyone who has read official German statements, not the kind con- 
cocted by Jewish newspapers in New York but official German docu- 
ments, will realize that National Socialist attacks on the Jews were 
based solely on the fact that the Jews were the motivating force behind 
Communism in Germany. National Socialist anti-semitism had nothing 
to do with the Jews as either a religion or a race, but was based solely 
on Jewish treachery, which caused ’German defeat in 1918 through the 
medium of a Red inspired munitions strike led by Jewish trade union 
leaders. Should war come with Russia, America might well experience 
similar Jewish tadiics behind our front lines and then we would under- 
stand the honest rage and anger of a man like Adolf Hitler, who saw 
his country stabbed in the back by Red Jews in 1918. 

James A. Madole 
National Director 
National Renaissance Party 
224 E. Mein Street, Beacon, N.Y. 


A WORD FROM ME TO YOU 

Are we still citizens of the United States of America and does our 
government work for us? 

Or have we become feudal subjects of corrupted government cun- 
ningly placed as a changeling in 'the cradle of the free and honest 
American institutions established by the Founding Fathers? 

We are supposed to have a Republican form of government. And 
we are supposed to believe that Democrats must be- democratic and 
that "free enterprise" must encourage freedom of thought and utterance, 
instead of bureaucratically suppressing that freedom, 

But just enter the door of any government office and you will be 
driven to the conclusion that you must have been carried in your sleep 
beyond (he seas and dumped into the anti-democratic atmosphere so 
widely advertised as being characteristically Russian Communistic or 
British aristocratic. 


HOW DR) THIS COME ABOUT? 

The answer is; The American elective process has become deter- 
iorated, because the American people have left the choice of candid- 
ates for public office to the politicians, 

Just think of it, Democratic bosses advanced such names as Franklin 
D, Roosevelt Jr. and Robert F. Wagner Jr. as candidates for New York 
State Governor. Neither has yet displayed any ability nor have they 
had the experience to warrant even the mention oMheir names in re- 
lation to the Governorship of the largest state of the Union. Their only 
known virtue is that by accident of birth, they selected ■vote-getting 
fathers. Is this a new aristocracy that is creeping into American life? 

Furthermore, are eledlive offices to be divided equally among the 
principal three religious beliefs of this country? If so, we might as well 
establish a theocracy and let the ministers, rabbis and priests run our 
national affairs. 

This is decidedly no! the American way! 

America, in its present crisis, needs the services of its ablest citizens, 
but not on the basis of affiliation. This should be borne, in mind by every 
citizen, when voting for members of Congress in two months from now 
and for the next President in 1952. 

The disinterestedness of our citizens in our government (50% did 
not even bother to vote in 1948) is the cause for our country having 
gone so far down the road to ruin laughing at extravagance unto 
hundred of billions of dollars, that we could re-elect a man to the Pres- 
idency who had knowingly scoffed away treason as "Red Herrings" 
and that we forced upon Russia so much of our planet that inevitably 
will be used in the great showdown between the religious free lands 
of the West and the. Godless despotism of Soviet Russia. It is our fault, 
because since 18 years we ridiculed honesty and thrift as though they 
were vices. 

American citizenry must pay the bill of governmental waste, Can 
we afford to continue to dtand idly by while the American common- 
wealth is driven into bankruptcy? 

A PLAN FOR THE AVERAGE AMERICAN TO THINK OVER: 

Since up to now President Truman has refused all of the people's 
demands (as well as the demands of members of Congress) for a 
thorough house-cleaning of all government offices— ridding them not only 
of Communists, but also of the long stale bureaucratic elements which 
have been syphoned during the regime of the “New Deal" and “Fair ’ 
Deal" into the federal offices— and since appointed high government 
officials, such as Acheson, "refuse to turn their backs" on such former 
government employes as the convicted Alger Hiss, there remains only 
one thing to do; 

Between now and Election Day on November 7th, our 
American voters should drum into the minds and conscience 
of all candidates for Congress the determination that in 1951 



! NATIONAL RENAISSANCE 
; BULLETIN 

OCTOBER 1950 


THE "FAIR DEAL'S" UN-AMERICAN AND IMREHAN STATE DEPT. 
’ Rev, Emmanuel Reichenberger has been,' known (or years for his 
haying espoused the 'cause of. the German expellees who were driven 
by communist hordes at an hour's notice in, the middle of winter from 
' their ancestral homes in Eastern Germany and Sudetenland and who 
are now dying in camps in Western Germany. 

At 'least Ive millions of those unfortunates have perished during 
theJastfive years, but yet, Rev, Reichenberger was informed by the 
U,. S. State Department that his actions, while he wOs inspecting those 
camps, were distasteful to the U. S, High Commissioner to Germany 
and to the State Dept. • 

Considering that Communists and Jews outproportion the Christians 
in. the U. S. foreign service, and sousidering, Dean Acheson's make-up, 
one can readily .understand that Rev. Reichenberger is "persona non 
grata 1 ' with them. 

He would be dined and wined and would speak from the Waldorf- 
Astoria. hotel— instead of having to use his own meagre funds and be 
in. poor health at his modest, home in Chicago— if he would appeal for 
help lor "displaced persons" from the Red ghettoes of, Eastern Europe, 
or if he would engage in promoting legislation to flood this country with 
more jabbering left-wing Jews. * ' , 

This idea of coddling Communists and Jews has been uppermost 
in the minds of "New Dealers" and ’"Fair Dealers" during the last seven- 
teen years and there aught to be a golden opportunity for American 
patriots now to stop this abuse. 

v ■ All menabers and friends of the National Renaissance Party are 
requested ’to vote for: 

Thomas E. Dewey— Republican Party— for Government of New York 
v. „ Joseph R, HanleyrRepublican Party— for U. S. Senator 

Vincent Impellitteri— Experience Party— for Mayor of New York City 

If you should neglect to vote and thereby permit such pro-Zionist 
candidates like Herbert Lehman and Fredinand Pecora to be elected 
and thereby help to perpetuate the 1 "Fair Deal", then you would help to 
sell the Stars and Stripes' down the River and would not be worthy to 
live 1 in the 'same country with those boys who are dying' to halt the 
'spread of Communism abroad, while Truman and his Jewish clique are 
trying to sell us STATE SOCIALISM here. • ■ 

James A, Madole 

- ■ National Director 

, L, , . ' • • . ■ • ' National Renaissance Party 1 

224 E. Main Street, Beacon, N.Y. 


Please join the National Renaissance Party and subscribe to' our 
monthly bulletin, net fee $3.00 (Subscription without membership card 
$2.00 per year.) Send your subscription, membership fee or donation to, 
the National Renaissance Party 224 1 East Main Street, Beacon, New York 

"LET'^ SAVE AMERICA FOR WHITE CHR1STIAN-AMERICANS"! 


Published Monthly at Beacon, N.Y.' $2.00 per year 

, Official organ of the National Renaissance Party devoted to a 
restoration of the American Republic, the preservation of American 
sovereignty and equal representation of management and labor. 


HOW TO CURB THE POLITICIANS 

Such politicians as Ed Flynn could not be the Democratic boss of 
New York and conspire with President Truman to pull William O'Dwyer 
off a hot spot — if New York citizens were alert and vigilant. 

Such men as Benton and Brien McMahon can sit in the U. S. Senate 
only because of the total interest of the citizens of Connecticut in the 
affairs of their State. ■ i . 

Such an uncouth and ignorant man as Harry S. Truman could' not 
be the President of the United States, and cause 20,000 American casual- 
ties in his private "police action" against a "bunch of North Korean band, 
its" — and cause inflation in this country run wild, at least, before elec- 
tion — if people in most parts of the United States would really care for 
jhe public interest and be less apathetiaal about their government. 


One of the greatest issues facing the American people is the crimin- 
ally wasteful cost of government as a direct result of 'the unprincipled 
policies and conduct of the Truman administration, for when- one party 
remains in power too long, it becomes corrupt and its, elected and ap- 
pointed officials develop into tyrants. The only 'check on corruption and 
tranny can be the threat of the voters to throw ithe rascals out and elect 
their opponents. Fear of defeat alone can curb politicians when their 
power goes to their heads and they lose their sense 'of balance and pro : 
portion. 

, , 'But if the citizens show no interest in public affairs and give the 
green light to the politicians - if the voters are satisfied with a name, 
a smiling face and 1 a charming voice ■- then the politicians have every- 
thing their own way - as we see in the present exposure of police graft.. 
There would be no crooked police, if there were no crooked politicians. 

More even than by the absurdly excessive payroll-army of twa 
million appointive jobholders— and "te sisters .and their cousins and 
their aunts"-has the "Fair Deal", been kept going, in ifs treasonable 
course by the pussyfooting and the "Me Tooism" of the Republican Party. 

Because of this apathy on the part of its citizens, this country invites 
a one, party control— than which there can be no greater dangerr-mat- 
tering very little, whether such one party is named "Republican", "Dem- 
ocrat", "American labor", ."Experience", or what have you. 1 1 



t> ■ ♦ 

The only thing that matters is that the American people decide, 
whether they want top-notch, efficient offidals-or good fellows, with 
glad smiles— and a hand the till. ’ 

It is up to all oi us who want to ban corruption from our city, state 
and national government— to demand debate and discussion of what is 
good for our country— because our structure of freedom nests on a found- 
ation of citizen participation in government. 

Also, if a candidate promises the moom-and, when elected, turns 
out to be a bad egg-let us make use of the recall and throw the rascal 
out without delay. 

If we had followed that principle, we would not have had an ever-) 
vacationing Mayor who dared to frown on a Grand Jury investigation 
of police graft as a "Witch Hunt" and the White House in our national 
capital would not be disgraaed until 1952 by a nincompoop who blocks— 
as "Red Herring" every investigation of communist infiltration in govern- 
ment. 

The Democratic candidates are: 
for Governor— the "bow nothing" "Fair Deal" wheel horse, 

Walter A, Lynch; 

for U. S. Senator— the international banker and Zionist, 

Herbert H. Lehman; 

for New York City's Mayor— the "do nothing" Tammany stooge, 
Ferdinand Pecora; 

To all three, as well as to the Manhattan West side Congressman, 
Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. as well as to the Bronx cheer, Jakob Javits, we 
say “NIX"! - 5 > 

We recommend a bullet vote for Mayor Vincent Impellitteri, running 
under “Experience" Party. He has had five years of experience as Pres- 
ident of the City Council; has been acting Mayor during O'Dwyer's end- 
less vacations; and has refused Tammany's bribe of a $28,000.— Judge- 
ship for 14 years— if he would not oppose Pecora, 

Ex-Mayor O'Dwyer, who only a month ago was titular head of the 
Democratic Party in New York City and once one of its chief vote-getters, 
to-day could become the loneliest man in town. All politicans shy away 
from the "fugitive" from scandals, while barely five weeks ago-when 
O'Dwyer left City Hall-seven- bands made so much noise that questions 
weren't asked. 

KURT MERTIG 

, New York City chairman 

NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 
317 E. 54th St, New York 22, N.Y, 


THE UNITED NATIONS IS TREASON! 

In the coils of the United .Nations, the all-powerful international 
conspiracy is choking the life of our nation! 

On Guard! Americans! The much heralded United Nations Day 
on October 24th, 1950, should be called "National Surrender Day"! 

The United Nations Charter has tom gaping holes in the structure 



of our Independence. Hoisted in black ignorance and blacker treason 
throughout the land, the rag of the UN has tarnished the once shining 
sovereignty of our beloved Stars and Stripes. 

Under the UN Charter thousands of Americans have been arbitrarily- 
ordered abroad to fight and die under the alien UN flag. 

When UNRRA was siphoning American taxpayers' money abroad, 
Congress was refused permission to check the use of those funds. 

When well-founded suspicions -were aroused that the UN setup in 
New York was a cover for foreign spies, the Secretary Deputy General 
(a Russian) brusquely told us that the UN Headquarters was internat- 
ional territory — and that we could investigate nothing there. 

Americans who desired our representation to Spain raked to lull 
embassy rank were refused because the United Nations did not approve, 

And still we call ourselves an independent nation! 

Facts condemn the United Nations far more forcefully than do opin- 
ions— we merely cate: 

On July 19, 1950, the Inndon Express (Britain's largest daily) said 
that the United Nations was an ffitemationd Nuisance and should be 
done away with. 

On August 25, 1950, the Washington Times-Herald said editorially 
that the UN is and always was a villainous fraud, 

Next time you read about the UN|— or see the UN rag fluttering in a 
public place-think of some of the characters associated with it. 

For example, take Trygve lie, the Secretary General, Trotsky devoted 
an entire chapter in his last work "Stalin and his Crimes" to the subver- 
sive activities of Comrade lie. He stated: "The Comintern regarded lie 
as one of its chosen instruments". ! 

And take Alger Hiss! He presided dver the Dumbarton Oaks (or was 
it Hoax?) and also over the 1945 San Francisco Conference, at which the 
evil charter of the UN was planned.. 

Even after the infamous Milton Mayer, a professor at Chicago 
University, had publicly insulted the American Flag, it was Hiss, as 
director of the American Association for the United Nations who annexed 
that group to Mayer's movement for World Government 

■ In her widely syndicated column, our U. S. delegate to the United 
Nations, Eleanor Roosevelt, has boldly stated; “The UN is the incubator 
for World Government". 

Joseph Kamp lists more than five-hundred connections between 
World Government supporters and Red organizations that have been 
declared subversive by the U. S. Attorney General. A nice tenit-^ 
indeed! 

American! On Guard! Make UN Day, Oct. 24, 1950, a day for roar- 
ing protest! 

Our Motto: 

GET THE UNITED STATES OUT OF THE U. N. AND 
GET THE U. N. OUT OF THE UNITED STATES! 

PETER L. XAVIER 


-L 


* 



) , -f, 



■ But the results of the last elections on November 7th indicate that the 
American people are beginning to realize the hoax that has been played 


hind the "New Deal — Fair Deal" regimes of Roosevelt and Truman have 
pillaged America's resources, manpower and honor since 1933. We were 
led into World War D in order to destroy the military power of Germany 
and Japan, thus rendering Europe and Asia helpless against Soviet 
Russia. In the meantime, the refugee Jews made the uniforms and made 
the profits, both financially as well as politically, and the Sidney Hillmans, 
the Baruchs, the Frankfurters and |osenmans carried out on the home 
front Roosevelt stooge Harry Hopkink' slogan: "We will spend and spend, 
tax and tax, elect and-elect." j 

The American working man only needs to look at the withholding 


the ever rising cost of .living in order to convince themselves how closely 
Truman's "Fair Deal'' followed Roospvelt's "New Deal'1 

. ’ Dean Acheson's "foreign policy" suits the Communist Jews. Our 
State Department antagonizes Spain and Argentina and keeps Germany 
and Japan in a helplessi state — so-that America will stand alone when 
Russia attacks. Acheson should really be on the pay-roll of Joseph Stalin! 

The defeat of “New Deal — Fair Deal" Senators, Congressmen and 
Governors on November 7th may jstave off the final catastrophe of a 
nation-wide depression until the dgwn of a final American Nationalist 
, victory iastsdts/rays'bver the Potdmac. ,• 

NEW YORE CITY'S ilYORALTY ELECTION „ 

The National Renaissance Parly held meetings and sent out' an un- 
precedented amount of literature!; urging the election of Vincent R, 
Impellitteri as New. York City's htayor. Although the “Non-Sectarian 
Anti : Nazi League" boasted that its chairman was Impellitteri's campaign 
manager, nevertheless Impellitterif election appeared to be the lesser 
of three evils, since all Jew-controlled New York newspapers opposed 
him, To-day the same papers are telling him what they want him' to do. 

, ■ We warn Mayor Impellitteri (a Catholic of Italian descent) that the 
’ support given him ;by American Nationalists may be withdrawn in the 
next election and he may find himself then in the dubious company of 
those, who refer to' the! 5 Virgin Maryjas a Harlot and to Jesus Christ as a 
Bastard, •' - 1 • < 



-I National Renaissance Party 
'j 224 E. Main Street, Beacon, N.Y, 


Please join, the National Renajssance Party and subscribe to our' 
monthly bulletin, net fee $3,00 (Subscription without membership card 
$2.00 per year,) Send your. subscription, membership fee or donation to, 
the Nationcd Renaissance Party 224 East Main Street, Beacon, New York 



NATIONAL RENAISSANCE 
BULLETIN 


NOVEMBER -DECEMBER 


Published Monthly at Beacon, N.Y, $2.00 per year 

Official organ of the National Renaissance Party devoted to a 
restoration of the American Republic, the preservation of American 
sovereignty and equal representation of management and labor. 


WHERE DO WE STAND? 

. I intentionally refrained from commenting for over one month, as I 
first wanted to see whether President Truman and his alien-minded gang 
in our national administration in Washington would change the foreign 
and domestic polities which the American voters so clearly repudiated 
at the polls on Judgment Day, November 7th last - or whether he would 
run hue to form (like a Missouri mule) and act as if he never had heard 
of the election results, 

The American voters felt that government by an ex-haber-dasher, 
his cronies, his pressure group allies and the secret wire pullers behind 
the scenes in Washington was leading to “State Socialism" and that 
continuance in office of Secretary of State, Dean Acheson; Secretary of 
Defense, George C, Marshall; his assistant, Anna M. Rosenberg; Secretary 
of Agriculture, Charles F. Brannon, etc. was a threat to U). S, security — 
hence the people angled out for special punishment those who were 
, closest to the ideology of Trumanism, such as .Senator Tydings, of Mary- 
land, Meyers, of Pennsylvania, andiScott Lucas, of Dlinois, 

When a wise man faces a crisis, he asks himself: "What is wrong 
with what I have done?" — then he seeks out his faults and probes for 
ways and means to straighten himself out. 

An imbecile, however, devotes his thoughts and efforts to trying to 
cover up his mistakes by new lies - until presently the whole structure 
collapses on his head. 

Since Mi\. Truman refuses to see the light, it is up to the American 
people to arouse and inform themselves, in order to back up the new 82nd 
Congress' endeavors to closely re-examine and remedy America's errors 
since 1939 in order to safeguard America's future. 

Just as Woodrow Wilson should not have gone to Versailles, F. D, 
Roosevelt should not have gone to [Teheran and Yalta, and Harry S. 
Truman ought not have gone' to Potsdam. All three lacked the moral, 
strength to meet the challenge of Europe's crooked power politicians. 
Neither of the three was equal to the task of defending 'American inter- 
ests, or the white man's civilization, or Christianity itself, 


a 


Roosevelt did everything in his power to encourage the waging of 
"Jewish holy war" which international Jewry had been carrying on 


v 


f 




ift 






against the Hitler regime 'since 1933 — instead oi placing America's good 
offices at the disposal of Poland, Britain, France and Germany to come 
to a real understanding and thus preclude the breaking out of hostilities 
in the form of World War II. 

It is tragic that the "American" kept press should almost always 
succeed in diverting the American people's mind irom such main issues 
as 'the asinine "unconditional surrender" terms, the fiendish Morgenthau 
Plan and America's failure in not having concluded during the last five 
and a half years equitable peace treaties with either Germany and 
Austria or Japan. 

Roosevelt and Morgenthau gave U. S, Treasury plates to Russia to 
make American money (valid only in Germany) for which the Germans 
had to pay. Truman approved of dismantling. Germany's industry and 
turning over their essential assets to the Russians, Eisenhower's hatred 
of the Germans knew no bounds so that he enjoined so cid 'fraternization 
long after the end of hostilities. 

Former German soldiers who were prisoners of war in. America clahn 
that the United States withheld $333,000,000, - of prisoner of war pay for 
work they performed while prisoners here which amounts, to outright 
thievery! * '• 

Only recently a Bonn German government commission was blocked 
for months at Lake Success from presenting, to the United Nations a 
petition for the repatriation of 1,300,000 German prisoners of war and 
millions of German civilians which’ were bartered 'away by Roosevelt 
during drunken orgies at Yalta and si remain unaccounted forinRusSk 

After denuding Germany and murdering and imprisoning their lead- 
ers, we now heroize the Germans and would use them to save our own 
skins. How can we expect the Germans to serve under this same Eisen- 
hower as second class troops and labor battalions in the 'defense of 
Western Europe and America against the Russians? The Germans are 
now slaves and victims of international gangsterism headed by Russia; 
England, France and even our own United States and.the Germans are 
right in refusing to be led to slaughter to defend their despoilers! 

At Teheran the United States gave the then weak Soviet Russia a 
blank check in Europe and Asia - which meant purely and simply the 
sell-out of Nationalist China and the abnegation of American, control of 
American decisions in foreign affairs. 

As not even now, six years later, all the details of those criminal 
conspiracies against humanity at the infamous Yalta and Potsdam con- 
ferences have come to light, the only remedy is a thorough re-examinaiion 
of these and other unconstitutional secret deals by a duly authorized 
Congressional Committee - with power to declare them null and void 
as illegally arrived at. 

The U. S, State Department's abandonment and betrayal of National- 
ist China from 1044 (when it was still resisting Communism) to this date 
(when it is still offering to fight) is one of the most grievous errors in 
American history. It was designed originally by Soviet Russia and was 
carried out in the U. S'. State Department by Russian agents, among 



whom the one who has been most publicized 'is none other than Alger 
Hiss, the former Rockefeller lower and once the president of the un- 
American Carnegie Foundation. 

One of the reasons why the Republicans made such large gains in 
the November elections is the American public's disgust with the "New 
Deal - Fair Deal" foreign policy which is for war, and not for peace! Are 
we afraid of peace? Must we fall forever for the, secret wire-pullers siren 
song: "Onward Christian soldiers — we will make the uniforms!!" 

Since in the executive branch of our government we have at present 
a President and an alien-minded crew who openly declare that they do 
not intend to comply with the change in our foreign and domestic policy, 
that was demanded by the American people the next two yearn may 
be crucial in the life of our nation. 1 

Therefore we propose to help arouse public opinion, in order ta 
back up Congress against the 1 warmongers, profiteers and secret wire 
pullers inside and outside of the Truman administration. 

Therefore we shall continue to build up our weekly Tuesday 8. PAL 
meetings 'at the York Avenue Cafe, cor. 84th St. and York Ave. f N.Y.C. 
with guest speakers on al. important national issues* 

We shall mail- our monthly bulletins free to every member of Con- 
gress as well as to a selected list of leaders of public thought. 

We shall gradually circularize pur entire list of sympathizers and 
endeayor to enlist their active -suppott. 

We shall continue to speak and, write the truth as we see it and as 
time has proved it to be correct - even if we are called "Fascists", 
"Nazis" or "anti-semitic" by the un-American subversive pressure groups 
in Washington, Albany and New York City. 

' Now that the American people have at last begun to realize that 
Communism is a danger to America, we are going ahead and wilt tel 
who is behind Communism, and who are the people who not only con- 
trol our government, but also the governments of all' countries. 

To expand ’and carry out such program, we must have increased 
support horn our Sympathizers; and so we are asking them to make a 
contribution in whatever amount he or she can afford. The most import- 
ant thing is that every one send something, no matter what amount. 

KURTMERTIG 

CITIZENS' PROTECTIVE LEAGUE 
NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 
kl E. 54th St., New York 22, N.Y. 


THE RED TIDE'EBBS ra WASHINGTON ■ 

Two thousand years ago, the Roman prefect (of what now constitutes 
present day Israel) 1 washed his hands of the blood of an innocent man 
and condemned Jesus Christ to crucifixion. The politician Pontius Pilate 
did not dare to oppose the Sanhedrin. Today we condemn that cowardly 
act — . but nontheless, we let politicians folow the same procedure and 
let them sell whole Christian nations into slavery to appease the Jews. 



federal Bureau of ! 

U*S* Courthouse 
Bo ley Square 
Hanhattan^lTew York 

Bear Sirs: 

Recently I received the enclosed 'literature' 
through the mail* I am unfamiliar with the activities 
of this organization hut a perusal of the literature 
seems to indicate that it is ndt interested primarily 
in the betterment of conditions in the United States* 

I realize that there is nothing illegal about 
the contents of these pamphlets and I am not anxious 
to have innocent people subjected to unnecessary 
investigation* To me however the best interests of the 
United States are of vital importance* I sincerely 
hope that the only action that will be necessary as 
a result of this letter will be its filing in the 
I wastebasket however that is up to you* 

















W* SteJtoral bureau of Ittuestigatl^n 
Unite?* States Heparfmeni of duatice 


(7-30-46) P®^CT0R1 

8M BUY 


I REPLY. PLEASE REFER TO 


COMPLAINT FORM^ y 


v . j? • s? 

AwT'70/v/fi. /j£y\//9/<£S r* 

<&&?&& £#*/ ^r^- 


&acr&s?, s/- y. 



Address of Subject 


Character of Case 


„ ^.-.-billttiainant 


Date and Time Complaint Received 


DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: 


m^iOTORmTig^comOT> 4 


FACTS OF COMPLAINT: 




MA 




oz^cy *7r/s 










F. B. 1 . 











Director, EBI 




SAC, NeW York ; -.; ■'- 


;|B5H 


June 1951 




P.O,Box 37> St. mbans,. Nev YorK 4 • iC R ■; V * • : • :, 1 ' " : 

-='• * " ■ 'v *•-••'•- Rf -R 

22fe.E&st M&in Street*. £B^con, Hev> Y°*& i “ :' ■ > - >;R'V / :'.wC-.'K 
JAMES Hi MADOEB, National Director >/ ; 1 . " : ‘-V" '- 

KORT MERTIG ' ■ / 'R‘ ‘‘ ^ : v R ■■ ' 

bxeeehs* mm&m& league " , r r4,if ' -5 . * / - 1 •:-•••'* ■-. * 
HAKOHAI. / .•/ :'■■ RR. • ‘ R v ; -R^. v 

317 East j&tfc Street^. H^-'Yopic.^S# • -...••i^'j*.'"-'’-', i ; : >'.:'■%> 

5QY East',64tb street HeF' YorK ^ ' H*xR;j$eietin£ 

DOUGLAS l^dfeTHUR iJKffiS^^'-V • . R. 4 *. • ' • OT'V ' • fV •*• : R . ' : > '- .f 

Maar;25,''i95l. R. ; ,, ; Rl .V ' .JRR .j ,;: i RR- ; 

Jamaica Avenue &' 217tb Street, Quiets Village <.C 'R-.'R’v 

OTERHAL SECURITY - X ^ " V rrR;R Referral/ 



i of xsf Breiices T^e^.cQnd^iitie 

®UMAH^'tbis office has: a> synopsis ; o£«tfcie; lii 

tlie ^enclosures gertaiMng /!SSyri|E: ; 

Secrat Servlcev ■ ;RRRR’:RrRV' ■ RfR~R;. /rR'R ¥ RRRR V-..R r V: -\i • R ; 


‘V v Rr */*v / 1 




1 '.;•' ' ■ >.,-; R * Vr.?«o-isFvl' > v-t-j/ var^vrf31rHr^^^iR’3£P1^ ■ : '-\ ;i -;.- U' 

|:/r . -r; x r/rrr RRIRIRR , 

iK/R -Rl- ■" >RlXr v ’ ."* ’VR j, - R ■/• -• ■''■»' ■"' srrr ;aR'RRr^^'-R 


tr.V-V^X&F; <• 

lj . -, > R. 1 v',/ 

,; ' f i -1 R «i- *' / '1 












7T /tg 

tlf™ 


r*&<& 






FD-169 


b6 

b7C 


BECOBD OF INFORMATION FURNISHED OTHER AGENCIES 


ORALLY 


FT' 


BY TELEPHONE 


Bate: jsl 

Information Bejuested Conoorning: if&Asi & ^*^4 


Information Furnished from File, Serial and Page Number: [ J & 6 Cf/ 


Information Furnished/to: 


Remarks : 





/C?bl£ist 







<SV&\ 









$£( information contained 

J$?!?TN .IS, UNCLASSIFIED ^ 
1 ‘^ a>- 3\v5\o\ BY31&M 


FBI - NEW YORK 

^27 1951 



Special Agent 






jg 


(7-30-45) 


ifeheral Tj&txvmtt of Jttuosttpaitotr 
&stfioft ^fofoa Sofrarfmotti of limit cb 


m 




IN REPLY, PLEASE R EFER TO 
FILE NO 


- COMPLAINT FORM ,a 


>yu 




Subject's Name and Aliases 

0sacj>m , M-y. 


A ddre ss of Subjec 


Character of Case 
DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: 


Address of CompJLaman 


Date^and Time Complaint Received 


FACTS OF COMPLAINT: 






54?.. <5L 











DirecUor, PBI . 

i SAC » Ifew York , ( l6£-lQ6h ) - 

'.imfomi,- WikiM.dm.:TPxtTY s ‘H 

ts -t- -■v.-r ; v ;m 


J , Enclosed } ;f 6 r;tU« inf opmation is the latest., 

pamphlet Issued by the National Renaissance Party; Information 
regarding this organizstiOntJas previously-. furnished the. Bureau 
hv V. 'ifltAen : dated 6 ’/l)f/^l> ghis. pamphlet was obta ined from. . , , 

f who also * : ,v !... 

advised that this . organization is" presently conducting ' • ;< •. o' 

%-sionthly meetings ±h,Yorksville;j apder,; the direction; . > 
Of; its -leader, -JAMES.. MDQJ.^ 4 . • ‘ . - . , ■ / J ■ • ; 1 . v 


Enc * ( l ) t " 






yfy-L'kX^H /■ « .•••.••••.; / 

,/^:V :. 


» >j - \4 rt , y* - . V 

/r ► * * , * J * • / % 


V>, 


: - .y/*’ - - /' 


f ^ v , _ \ V ' “ << ^ ,* ’ i* v 7. - -*?7 

’ * / ; ' % ^ 1; ■- . ' > . '■ * ^ r’ /; * *'• * \ \ 


- ’ ' 'X*,*,* '* > ^ r \: 

, 4 i*" 41 ,*-* V*: 1 








mil 


w ■ 

, CM'-sV**. 





rf 


*^'1 VV, ' 




, . i 


big ; sj^jmDAi nightpr®o^ ;n; ; - : . /<.■•.. .,->; 

li you believe in the pjatfioils^inotple., 

titf'Ba&hB&i C badjfin^Sex^^o it&&& 


y. > 


MdOargby' ana the American First Party* you should be a suppler; of 
National Renaissance Party. We beli% the 
took place when, the Pro-Conuaunist Roosevelt 
V/ar against the heroic Christian people of Nazi^Gemany and,- Fascist; it^y 
We believe in friendship with Franco-Spain, Pe?jen* - e Argentina, and^the Ne^j 
Fascist parties in Italy and Germany, We believe in maintaining the f • 
patriotic McCarran Law which: has been so viciously attacked by . Pr^Gonua^ 

. .-racial minorities* -• V'.-V,.' , ; -'v 

\ Our taek is the . consolidatann of all German, Hungarian 

Irish racial groups ♦, And second; the acquistionof Influence for a 
quent , show of. power in American, politics* The second part ^ -is. ropst 
American Germahdom dynai^o^... .je^inisi> its bated ady 

*A ftndxPereecuted everything,, of .Ce^an- origin for 


\-y. 


o 


who have 

.30 years* T Our battiefieid. : :i.S' right;, here in-America andli#^ .1%,^ 

• must- fight,. thtta&dBCBtekg^^ 

■ . It out.' - ■ It- is ;iu?g^t;^thnk ' every,;; American . citlzen'Sf . -German ‘ de^cenf 
join the.' national* Itenai^^Cn- furthering cooperation;: 
American Gemandonn-: ■iV :-x- ' lf ^, : ‘'YV. \ 0 ■ . v . ■ 

: , ' , , . . Attend our Special;meeting -on 

at 8 p#M* in private hall at 169* East 86th Street, Second Floor, 
.above Loews Theatre, near Horn & Hardhart, speaker*- 

, free literature, come, and bring your friends* ipterestiing.] 


. ^ * ' - 


&Lt INFORMATION CONTAINED, 
■/HEREIN . IS. UNCLASSIFIED 

m&j&dtiZ, ...jfaasli 


- ' ' . **** - ' -'.f -* 

i/ 

. y w>- ^ #' £ r f W' 


r S£ARCHER„„!j.y^KDEKm^^ 

; S^IAUZED.oAfef.FI 


FEBlir 

* ' '■ 
t ,4, J ‘ 

. , FBI Vi NEW :VORK; 

■I" ^ 







IN RKK.Y. PtXASK (UCnOt TO 
FILE NO 

COMPLAINT FORM 




Character of Case 


Date and Time Complaint Received 


DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: 













1953 



f 


i 


COPT OP ERIKTED POST CARD RECEIVED FEBRUARY 17, 1953 


BIS SATURDAY HIGH! PATRIOTIC RALLY 


If you "believe in the patriotic principles of racial nationalism 
and social justice advocated "by Father Charles Coughlin, Senator 
Joseph McCarthy, and the America First PAriy, you should "be a supporter 
of the Rational Renaissance Pariy. We "believe the greatest tragedy in 
world history took place when the pro- Communist Roosevelt regime forced 
America into war against the heroic, Christian people of Razi Germany 
and Fascist Italy. We believe in friendship with Franco Spain, Peron* s 
Argentina and the neo-Fascist parties in Italy and Germany* We believe 
in maintaining the patriotic MeCarran Law which has been so viciously 
attacked by pro-Communist, racial minorities • 

' Our task is the consolidation of all German,- Hungarian and Irish 
racial groups, and second, the acquisition of influence for a subsequent 
show of power" in American politics". This second jipart is most important* 
American Germandom’must" become dynamic, turn against! its (hated adversar- 
ies who have ridiculed and persecuted everything! of G^rmahio origin for 
the last thirty years. Our bat tlef ie Id is right,- here 1 " in America, and 
here is where we must fight it out. - It is urgent that every American 
citizen of German decent should join the Rational Rejp^-ssance Party thus, 
furthering o qpje ratxbn among American Germandom.j 



teciij^mass' meeting on Saturday! Eva 


at 8 
directly 


ag,; February 21st , 
~(Sbcond floor 
.{ Y. C . Dynamic 


speakers, music||nd ^^|iterature. Come and bf'ing'iyourj friends. A 
very interestinggprbjg^aja^ . N ’ I' h .i 



Rational Renaissance Party 

z - ' ■ 




... 


SLIS F 9 RMATI0N CONTAINED 
UNCLASSIFIED 


SEARCHED INDEXED.. 

I SERIAU2E0 PILc.0 

(rrf> o 1 

FBI « NJjyt-tfOfcK. 












I .STANDARD FORM ' 


t 


• UNITED STATED GOVERNMENT 


2 sac 


DATE: 2-21-53 



FROM : 


SUBJECT: NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 
IS - G 


mimrnsm contained 



j The attached letter, relative to a proposed rally to he held in 

i the Ynrkv ille area on the evening of 2-21-53, was discussed with Supervisor 
| | who advised consulting the Bureau of Special Services and Investi- 

gations, NYPD, 

Upon contact with the latter agency, It was lv&raed tbit they ‘were 
| already aware of the rally and were prepared to cover it. 


"‘•"PHI 
A. M 



li 


'• | 105-1064 


l^i ' fr 




i y \> ,* * 


»// ! 


f*. 






' // * 

S k y" ) \ 


!• ,p< I NDEXSD* 



|B 211853 

>HaV» 0 RK 

\ w 


jp(- rl 






' ; 29 Q Broadway r. s 
NewYork 7 * Sew. tor fc 


••?£• v. \ * ■ 

"V 




A* ■’ :-v r^letitions . ; 


I)ear: Sir; 




/' ‘ ; *-. ;'. ,-V. 
Tf[ % %, && C^-*' *; 




isyi^iiiSs.is'^Si'vl 


: , i' 


% ■' : ■'." 


^ ChalJ[>fc,/^ 










* v , . 
; £■ * ?' v, \ ;.' 




5 ^.V-' e .A' .'» v V ' - 4 ’' 




;>,; >^r>rr 







IN REPLY, PLEASE REFER TO 


^federal Surratt of luuestfgatiou 
Hmteti States Hrpartmrut of 2Jusflco 

/ . f 


( 7 - 30 - 46 ) 


Subject's Name and Aliases 


Address of Subject 
Character of Case 


DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT; 


<fJ 0 l 


^ ^ ^ uumri 

A//f Tr^/vr/^l, AT^/t/fr/ S'S^/UCjp yy \ 

J^CciTH /'/Vo 5 o a/ ^ J 


COMPLAINT FORM 


Yr^>- 


~ /■' 2, £/ Ns 







^ Telephone /Number of Complainant 

?//>/& / 9 +j 

^~y Date ana Time Complaint- Received 

' - -/ 

'VrT Tr rvmr\ovth mrnvt ' rtmw a nrtm 


UNCLASSIFIED 


'JlilEL 


UO.VZ&SI 


FACTS OF COMPLAINT: 




— t— 




1 


ACTION RECOMMENDED BY AGENT; 








&ss t z ^ 














4 


FD-71 

(7-30-46) 


Sublet IT 1 ' S^ame^cT 


New York City 

Address of Subject 
Inter nal Barmrity - 
Character of Case 

DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT; 

I lid 


j Sfeherttl Vhxttu it of Jttuesftgation 
United states Srparfmctti of jftoaifc* 


COMPLAINT FORM 

^ ,a, v ) 



t-r , I * I 


mi* , , o 


M-- J. v 
— s/f 


Namejof J ^?om^^ 

Address of Complainant 

Telephone Number of Complainant 

April 6. 1953 

Date and Time Complaint Received 

/ i 


at thel 


I I He stated that sometime in January 1953? he and his 

FACTS OF COMPLAINT: 

date went to the Brauhaus , a beer tavern at «6th.£>t., and jrd ave. , lorxviJLLe . 

Durin g the cou rse of the evening a middle aged couple came into and shared a table 
— With] and his COJfapaKtoni During the course of the evening , t his unident i- 

fied Indiv idual started to explain the National Renaissance movement to I 
— \ I stated Lhafthe individual ''refrained from any anti semetic statements 

but descried the movement as an anti-Communist . I ~| stated that the move- 

— ment sounded '' vary Interes ting ' and Very patriotic. The individual later gave 
| |the add ress to which he could write for additonal information on the move- 

*' — -H[ 5 n 1 r «-~ 1 ~| stated that "ire d05's~not recall the address, but that, at the time 

he did send away for literature. In a few da ys, he sta ted he received the enclosu res 

hrough bhe iiiall. on the above ~T>r;ggHlaation. i I staged tha'L'~a± prior to the 

elections, this group was campaigning for Senator T aft and were staunch followers 


the Casino Theater, on 3rd Avenue, Xorkville . I I stated that he has' not 


National Chairman of the organization and' one M/Sdcde is New jborK cnairman 


Open Case - 


indexed 


huneola 












¥ 


FD-71 

(7-30-46) 


3tetieral Surrau of Imirattgatinu 
3Smte& Stairs SBrparfmrnt of Justice 


IN REPLY, PLEASE 
PILETNO. 


NATIONAT--EENAI SSANCE PARTY 


Subject's Name and Aliases 
New York City 

Address of Subject 

iNTEfflTAL SECURITY - X 
Character of Case 


COMPL. 


AjffrTSBM . 

r h< \ 




Name of Complainant 


Address 'of Complainant 

Telephone Number of Complainant 

5/13/53 = 

Date and Time Complaint Received 


DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: (Not applicable) 


FACTS OF COMPLAINT: A reviet-j of tfre files in the NYO fUcftT . cpg tbnfr . tb o i -Ahryn- p. 


organization is a Pascist-Nam type orfeani sat. -inn haarigri by JAMES H/mADOLE^ 

* * waBse&x®® 


/madqh 


ujdd? 




/xP‘l 


234 E» Main Street, Beacon J^New York« Considerable information /e this organization 
appears in the fileeeiitiii^ed "AfflMIST PARTY: IS-X» r FT 100-1064*- As is rs-ripH^ , 
on hhe attached FD-160 the Uatio&al Renaissance Party is a?1 an carriprl gg t/hp mVhjArvh. 
of this file* The information concerning the National Renaissance Party is 'h^ng 

remoyed from 100-1064 and is Ipeing transferee!, to this case flle r whif»h 'hping 

opened. J 







FD-160 


INDICES SEARCH SLIP 


TO CHIEF CLERK: 


DATE 5/11 /5S 


SUBJECT . NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 


ALIASES 


ADDRESS 


DATE & PLACE OF BIRTH 


Exact Spelling 

JtojLAII References 

Subversive References 

Main File 

Restricted to Locality of 

FILE .& SERIALv.NO.. ' REMARK 


^^INFORMATION CONTAINED 
3EREBLIS, UNCLASSIFIED 


FILE & SERIAL NO. ^ , • , -SREMA1 


MARKS. 








/ & ■ST — / <9(0 < ~f' £?& 








f-7 






' J £} 4--a~^ - 


0 V&£-a/j 


iho 


Searched by 


Clerk 


E. W. BUTLER. JfTO 




Agent SERtaL!2$§jg^^ “ 


MAY-1 2 1^53 

FSi-NEW YORK 


/ffjrv #/A> 


References Reviewed "by 








Office Memormdum * united statSb government 


to : SAC, New York (105-6113) 


DATE: 5/13/53 


erom : SA EDWARD W. BUTLER, Jr. 


SUBJECT: NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY; 
, IS-X ' 


A review/ of the file entitled "ANIMIST PARTY; IS-X”, NY 105-1064; 
reflects that the NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY is also carried as a subject of : 
this' file and that considerable information in this file gjrtains to the National 
Renaissance. Party. - ' . • 

. - ACTION: Transfer to 105-6113 from 105-1064 the ^following serials: 


105-1064-66' and 1A(13) 
-65 and 1A(13) 
-64‘ and lA(ll) 

' ’ -63 ■ 

-63 

:• - ' , ■ -61- v . 

-60 . 

-57 and 1A(10) 
-56 
-54 
, -51 

V ' -49 ' . 

•' . -48, > 

.7-47 //, 

■ ' -46- // \ 


// k 

■ Ao ® . yf 

T J/O* K 




105-1064-45 'and 1A(9) 

-43 ' ■ - ' , 

-42 and attachments 
-41 

-40 and 1A(8) ' 

-39 ' " 1 :: • 

—38 * 

-37 and 1A(7) (6) , 

. -36 and la(5) • j 

■- ' ... -35 : • ■ 

; ■ ,.34 ■ 

"X - -33 and 1A(4) . 

' \ A32 

) . -31 and lA(l) (2) (3) 

^ 7 -30 > . V • 

/ r-29 

/ -28 \ -■ 
/ ' -27 ' • , 

/• r 26 ■ - 

-25 ... ■ ; 


W j\ 


MS'Voc NY 105-1064* 


AT.T. lW ? mm±(M 00NTA1MSD 


I D S'— (p/l £ — W 

SEARCHED... .^...INDEXED....— 

SERIALIZED. LED.. — .... 

. MAY121T53-'- 

m - NEW YORK.*** 


STANDARD FORM NO. 64 


* Office JS/lemofiimMM • united stateJgovernment 

Mo t 


b6 

b7C 


TO 


EROM 


SUBJE 1 



SAC, NEW YORK 


SAC,,: NEWARK 


DATE: 4/16/53 


( 105-1112) > 



1 


? J\ - ' 


NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 
22k East. Main St., ' 

Beacon, N.Y. 

INTERNAL SECURITY - G 



]of[ 




] made J WdTI^me' the enclo sed publications. 1 
a that he in no way has any connection with t 


the National 


I 


] 


advisee 

Renaissance Party* but that he periodically receives the National 
Renaissance Bulletin as well as notices f,or meetings Of the National . 
Renaissance Party. 

The attached items are being forwarded , for your information 
and disposition inasmuch as the. National Renaissance Party activities 
are confined to the greater New.-York area, and the headquarters of 
the NRP is located in Beacon, N.Y. 


REGISTERED MAIL 


ALP:bmm 


Enclo surest 2: 






National 'Renaissance Bulletin dated 1/53^ . 

National Renaissance Bulletin dated 1/5 2~" 
National Renaissance Bulletin dated 12/52 - * 
National Renaissance Bulletin dated 10/52- 
National Renaissance Bulletin dated 7/52 — 
Post card ' announcing meeting*- 4 ' 

Throwaway captioned "World Jewry Calls for- 
New Holy War” 


,^¥n, 



ALL" INFORMATION CONTAINED 
HEREIN IS UNCLASSIFIED 
DATE i^ T£ \o\ _ BY39flfe ^ 





7 


(- 4 


APR 2 0 1?S3 

k'i — 



m 



r* 






/ .-4 a 

fyzhettd Surratt of InuestlgatloW-^^ 
•Hnlteti states iBepariment of duatxce 


FD-71 

(7-30-45) 


IN REPLY, PLEASE REFER TO 
FILE NO. 


COMPLAINT FORM 


A/ATi'onUI i fi£A/Ais$A#c6 jfttfT/ 

and 


Aliases 


/^f &C yt’it 


/ 



ArldrARPTof Gonrolainant 


Address of Subject 


Character of Case 
DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: 


is -_a 


Telephone ^Number of Complainant 

* ■- 3*y Fva. 



SC2 ^ 


Dawana Time Complaint Received 

3 



&^L ^g^Vs, 


FACTS OF COMPLAINT: 




r 




1 







The Hon.' Herbert Brownell 
Attorney General of the U. S. 
Washington,. D. C. „ • 

Mr. Hear General Brownell: 
K A postcard came in /this 
'morning’s mail. I had to turn 
it to the addressed side and 
read the postal mark to make 
sure it said “1953.”- : 

Until I saw that mark I 
thought the clock had - been 
turned back. 

The card ‘reads:,- ■ * 

3ig Saturday Night German- 
.American Friendship Rally. .-■$ 

■/ "We urge all' patriotic Anier 
lean nationalists who believe in 
friendship with the heroic' peo- 
pie of Germany and the preser- 
v i tl0 5 of 'western, civilization to 
attend' our mass meeting on Sat- : 
S? 1 ® ven .hig, May 2d, and hear 
the following dynamic: speakers 
converse on the. foUowing topics:, 
“1. B& r J.f Keith Thompson! for-' 
rner regisfeM^ffi®^^Ig^ 
for-General Remer’s (my note: 
RemCT. or. Roemer Was One- : of 
Hitler’s trusted buddies and -tried 
to form another Nazi party in 




^ ea ^r° T n '‘Zionist Atrocities,, in 
« h *?i I J oI y^ nd -' n Mr. - Thompson 
mu also discuss the current po- 
htical and economic situation in 
Germany. - * * r , . ^ 

can ^ Voters Alliance, wUl he 
asked to discuss the problems of 
German expeUees who were 
driven from their homes during 
tne cold Winter of, 1945. Lost ter- 
ritories in Poland, Prussia, * Si- 
lesia and Sudetanland, must be 
restored in- eKdac-OS, create a 
proud, free and economically 
seif : sufficient r German people. j 


J”jl discuss the " 'True 
Story of Nazi Germany and Adolf 
Europe^ 6 ** eor ^ e Washington of j 

A A !l k 4f ner ^ ca h s are welcome to 
attend these mass rallies. Non- 
citizens are equally welcome. The 
combined strength of.‘ German’ 
scientific ingenuity, technical' 
skill and manpower of America 
are sufficient to preserve thl' 
white, race and, Western civjliza^ P 
tion from the onslaught of Asia'^.R 
tic barbarism. . 1 j 

! , "Therefore, everyone : shouid at< ! 
f;:tend our mass meeting, on Satur- 1 
. day; evening, ‘toy; 2nd, , at 8 dnr'' 
in the private hall;at T69 E/S6th : 
(2nd * floor directly' i 
y* h0 ™ Loewfs Theater; near- Horn f 
■ 3 i~ Hardarts), conveniently. mearli 
;;Lexington -Av. Subway.' -dynamic I 

music. jPlease*. come and' ' bring I 
-Party. 

. A Would call: y:o u r attenfinn - 
• General Brownell, -to' the inf or ■’ 

wfll ' hP t n 3t ^ Thompson' 
Sf >'P rese nt at/ the meeting. 

very-fo udiy-— “former 
« ggd the’^rdT ^iieili. & r >l 


it says that^aras H.. Meddle 
win Be. present. This Is a leather- 
lunged twerp - who has fre- 
quented. Yorkville street corners 
for months sh6utmg..his'0bsceni* 
ties against what- he calls a 
‘aornst plot” to rule the world. 
Did you notewhathe’s going to* 
speak .on? “The True Story of 
Nazi Germany ^nd AdoIf Hitler, 

01 

■ * * ou ~. teU you a great deal 
about, Thompson and Medole, 
General Brownell, but rd rather 
have you. assign one or two of 
your : men to the meeting. Lei 
mi just listen and report what 
they ve heard# Have them get 
there early, for the place will be 
[crowded. ^ " A . *-,* . 

„ ^J inow for^ a fact that the 
M00,000 dead o^ Auschwitz^ 
Hachaa and Buchehwald will be 
:m attendance# . . \ y ■ a . • 
^^ey'Il Be^disapptlnted if/your^ 

| men don i, shoWr > , 1U 1 



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j' ; .^j^iej'gave a“-'roi^K, reception- to! a couple- of 'sai^la^ousersi They iwere' James]- 
' l£ Madole, , of Beacon, '&■£; Who poses a^a: political heir; of;Mussoiini, ’ aiid'.to; Harold! 
■'Keith Thompson <Jr; ( of.Chatham, ; N. - J., -who ; calls : himself ;&•& spotaan : ;foi?4hi^ 
5 f outlawed' goqaiHst^Rei^Pa ^iSi rGeemmy, "• ; 1 ; ? T '• ' : ; , ' { 'j 

r The r pair * called a -“German- indoors - Saturday eveningi, at 169 corner of 87tfi'St and Second 1 Avi 
;American ? lriendsWp^allyT in the E/86th St, but this arrangement where -they set up; ah America^ 

, narae,/of - the National; Renais- was ; canceled after Barry^ Gray flag, ' : . ’ - „ : .}. 

sance;,;My;‘to preserve - the charged Jn hfs ^ Sosfe column ana about time -we did iavrf 

'White' race and* Western, ayilizai ^ /tile 1 1 air ;that Madole , and Fascist party/’ declared Madole, [; 
- tionjroni the onslaught^, Asia* Thompson ‘were Fascists^' ‘ . ; a thin/ 'balding ' man with wild 1 
'tictebariskT/ V; wW^^SSS^ZXSMi eyes.' “Those who advocate' iHel 


Post Photo by Calvacca 


JSBMim 


Mltermer addresses YorlwiUe.nUy:. 


. .. '.As vit .turned -oilt, only^ qiuclc, ■> . . p doctrines.of Hitler'. | 

' tactful -work by. a half-dozen', cops ^ ■ .vW^ aii ijT^irr - i if* ' A stocky .blond man in a trench ! 

.from -the 23d precinct preserved t w «i]j e( j; U p c j ose < 

• ■■ Madole and, Thompson from the With police permission, me ora- ^ ^ «j£ y ou g 0 j. somelhing > 
,! ' onslaught of aroused citizens.'- » tors led a dreary band of perhaps 811 , [ , > i 

/ 'The meetinghad been scheduled 15 followers:., .to : the .southwest ■ ■■ , - GonMed^Jale 18 j 


**) 


■ "I' 1 ; 

- it! ' % , 


S ^' 


fs an $ \ 


titv 


:vssio®r 




4 


:5 


A 






iQontinued from Page 5 ■' \ v. 

:"|to say, say it without the flag.”, 
jHe was hustled around "the cor-' 
|ner and out of sight * by; two 
> patrolmen, 

TVsnitA 


.Despite the best effor ts 1 1 of J T £ e- 
Carthy, they can't clean out. the 
A I Augean stables in Washington /. /' 
J Madole said. ,, 

/There was a feeble cheer, for 
^McCarthy, and for Madole, who 
•Jshouted, . '‘The traitorous, swine 
Iwho call themselves Republicans 
iand Democrats sold {our boys,, 
/clown the river/' / >v A ’ 

A teen-age boy; asked several 
Iquestibns. Madole' said the qiies: 
|tions gave ah; idea' of'" the scum; 
^teaching in public schools.- The; 
^sooner we, put them in concentra- 
ition camps the. better/' ; r 
4’ Interruptions ^ became so/ fre- 
Aquent from the' growing crowd p 
|that police had their hands full. 1 
^Thompson :took over in an effort 
4tb restore - order; , A *6-foot-3 
i230-pounder with, a good-natured 
.fair; . he wilted - under questions fc 
ffforiv a man who T described him- i 
-fselfas a Catholic, war veteran. 
^Thompson' deft hurriedly by cab.j 



Madole resumed. \ 

. Jerry Cohen of the Jewish War 
Veterans outshouted ^Madole. 
"We're Americans here, not Fas- 
cists or Communists* and you, 
dare question our way' 

Madole's followers disappeared 
as hecklers crowded closer. Time 
and again police patiently cleared 
an open space in front of Madole 
and the boy holding the flag. 

Finally Madole gave up. A red-: 
headed man in . uniform, CpL 
Kenneth O'Brien, of. the' 2d * In'* 
fantry, Division; led the 'crowd fix' 
singing “God Bless America,” in 
front of , the conspicuously silent 
Afadole^ ;/*- , 

Then Everybody went about his 
business./ . , 




M * 


If 



H 

-t.1 


1 


, t 


/ 





The Bund-like iheeting last Saturday night has been; 
’ amply covered by colleague Oliver Pjlat He noted the com- j 
, ments of bigot James Madole, and Keith Thompson's con- ; 

. fused, lies about “Zionist atr oci- “ . r * 1 

ties.” ^ ' /. , vets joined the group. Wearing 

; I asked additional eye-witness their caps and mixing through 
coverage by layman Jerry Cohen, the crowds, they gave Jew-hater 
He’s the Kings County command- Madole a chance to finish his 
er of the Jewish War 'Veterans, harangue. Then they asked ques- 
K seems that Jerry and some tions, loud questions.. The crowd 
; of his buddies read a piece here thinned immediately. The hate 
* last week-end calling attention to mongers started to rup under the 
the meeting, -and advising; At- rocks they lived in. v r ^ ' 

; torney General Brownell of same. Madole - was bested by ' ques- 
They decided to attend. -Some tioning/and, quickly threw in the 
!, Catholic war vets, one just, back towel. Some say, it had a- swastika 
from Korea, came along., .. V* . on it. r ; Thompson took his place. 

According to, Cohen, the meet- Der Fuerer would have been' dis- 
In&jvhich was cancelled out of appointed in; th^outsized camp 
haln^ioye Loew’s 86th St. Thea- follower: /He ^ got ripped right 
ter, stiir&sd off on a street corner, th’ra’u g!ftxthe'. Catholic-Jewish 
with a fair a udie nce/: Then: the wringer-iA aA hurry. He folded. 
/ v '; ■; / ' ' ^ ^ Then the vets took over; A' young 

. 1 ; ' ; V ‘ ij Irish - lad,/ just- back from • the 

/ , ^ ] Korean shooting started ,.to - r smg 

, /- * ,f v } ^God Bless/America/ ; t \ >; 


riode that seems jto complet- 
ing its' circle. We . cafc^e in on 
the scene of* small streer^prner* 
mobs whipping malcontents; and 
failures into a frenzy with scape-. ^ 
goat speeches. Do; we" need ex- 
amples of the path this, takes? 
They move from corners to- cel- 
lars, from cellars to halls,, from- 
halls to stadia. They feed on the 
flood of hate and , inseeuiity 
proved in some. / . 1 v 

4 This vicious militancy must be 
crushed with reason; with ; ex- 
posure. It -cannot : be done' by 20 / 
young men, no, matter how pure 
and strong their intent. It needs 
public attention wherever it ' 
rears its brutal totalitarian head. . 
That means you. ■' •; w 

Ferret out these hysterical' 
cults/ attend" their weekly screamy r. 
ings. Bring company and make 
yourself heard. Slug with state- ’ 
nients, fight with reason, get /. 
them off-balance , and 'expose/ 
them for what they are. They’ll/ 
scream, rave, wave their apris, 
Finally they’ll crawl.,/* 'jj v / 
, Today it’s a street corner/ to- ■; 
nightmay be Munich! // / 


- By now -hundreds of the good! , V : 
people/of Yorkvilla had gathered 1 ] // 
and joined in ^ong’ , They, sangj ‘ 
lustily 'together. Madole, Thom p - 4 . 
f son; and a slack-jawe'd bully,, who* * 
looked like/a- stbrm trooper dying] - 

td get back to work, stood .silent J' j 
r The ‘ crowd , taunted : , them J 
“WhatsaJ matter* * dontcha knowf 
the v words ?”;If they .did ;if; was] 
not evident.;- , ’ ; ^ 1 

It makesyoufeel good to hear] 

Cohen tell the; story. There’s]. * ( 
only" one thing; wrong. Why did] , 
only .20 young men show? Where} 
were the representatives of hun-j 
dreds of groups in New. York] 
{that^OT record as liating^hatl 


plz^iole and his claque ^e?m for?j 
L W&jhgye/hyed through a ' pej 


Mm 


nr.rpyTTTO yBOM TH» 

' N.Y. POST, ■ 


DATED — iVlO.,-—-- 

FOBWAHD2D BY K. Y. DIVISION 


all information contained ^ ‘ . /-/; 

g®|IN IS UICIASSiriEt) . /n f- k //V ' jt* 

SEARCHED...., .INDEXED j- 

SERIALIZED i?vErr: FIL. E D . . , .i/P' ’ . 

. - -.MAY 3 F53l ; 

- ' ! • I • FBI - NEW YORK'- ' : yFO 3 : 

t£<JU O/JOU*} . : 



IN REPLY, PLEASE REFER TO 


Jefceral Stamm »f Jttuestlgation 
■Hmtefc States 33eparti*te«t at Justice 


COMPLAINT FORM 


FD-71 

(7-80-45) 



NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 
Subject's Name and Aliases 

New York, N. Y. 

Address of Subject 


Character of Case 


Name of Complainant 

J 

Address of Complainant 


per of Complainant 


Date and Time Complaint Received 


DESCRIPTION OF SUBJECT: (Not Applicable) 



ACTION RECOMMENDED BY AGENT: 


Pile attached enclosure in IA envelope. 





SAG," Hew Tork (100-111893) 5/13/63 

SA Edward W. Butler* Jr. * #1 ■ 


ESEDERlGK CHARLES ESRDIHAHD WBI3S, waj 
IS-X 


On A/WbS SAT 


has furnished reliable information. 

unknown tv These 


~1 received the follow ing items from 

Protect identity. 


in the past, out his sources are 
items can -he serialised and made a part of the case file.) 


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(l) January 31-37.* 1955 report re I*. 0, E, WEISS. 


This report that through oner 

who ofter 


n |(phonetic) , a man 

1 arranged a meeting with two 


''Rasskys " (Soviet Representatives) possibly with the DH and Weiss at the 
Hotel Astor* HTG, on $$$$#'' 1/5/53.. Weiss kept this meeting; The ,, Eusekys ,, 
want Weiss to write propaganda against the, Rearming of Western Germany. 
Weiss met these same tv/o meh ag&in on 1/5/65^ ’ 


be 

b7C 


U. 3. 


(may he the financial angel behind I I pronosed trip to the 

ett route from Germany to . Argentina* may have been .the 
financier of the publication of Weiss’s press releast ”HHAT IS BEHIND 
• TUB HANGING OS' SEE ELEVEN J2WS I IT PRAUGE". . 


- . WEISS is hack of K&DOLE (JAKES HADOLE) and his street meetings (NATIONAL . 

. . , . REHAISSMQE PARS!) . HAROLD. KSISH THOMPSON* is also mentioned/' 

* ^ ' 1 , - * V ”' T ^ 

1 ' Information is also set out with regard to replies received by Weiss as 

the result of the distribution of the above mentioned press release . 

(3) February 23 -26 report re NATIONAL EBNAI SSAHCF PARTI MEETING 2/21/53. ' . 




tfflIGS did not attend meeting* but attended, a pra-mee ting /conference 
where he b riefed Thompson. MAPPhE. THOMPSON.’ jjlhLINg; ~ WEISS and others 


IhO had 


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attended* 

paid for the meeting hall for the National Renaissance Party and also 
for its literature ' and the publication of the HEP bulletin. ®e said that 
he had to show tho aQ. , ’Rus,akyAn u that he Could produce add was worth - 
M $ 50.000 . and not the- §1.500 he whs offeredAv them,; (See erac't langu age) 

] and 


this quoting of Weiss re the ^Russkys ' 1 was correct,.) 

" - ' ' .. ;■ - , ^ > : Vv (continued' on page; 2) 

i colns-mp f'/ t’S'- & /' x ) * I ' ' _ 


00105-6071 (AOAWC) 


ALL IHFORMATION/COmBIED 

. herein is mcmss XmS)-v^k> 

/ bet 


[SEARCHED.. ......INDEED..... 

SERIALIZED ^.fe^LED 

WAY 1 2 If 53 

fSi . NEW YORK 




?a ge. 2 100-111893 8/13/53 



H^DOIiE’s speech. was very pro-Hitler and anti-semetic. 

He spoke in derogatory terms of Resident Woodrow Wilson,., E. D. R. t 
President Harry; S. Inman and President Eisenhower. 

iPHOMPSOBT* s speech was also ahti-semeite and pro-Hazi. ®e stated that 
he was going to helji the Arabs who were deprived of their homeland by 
Political Zionism. SJHOMPSOH stated that the American Committee for the 
Advancement of Western Culture was being formed and that he already 

had the support of a State Senator in California (California State 
Senator Jack 332UBEI).. . .... 

Report mentions the following individuals: „ 

MA3JOKO ’ V 



HSH EBBEDliAW 

mss '■ 




.V ! 





• - , \ . ■ . 


SAG, Hew York (105-60.71) 


SA EDWARD W, BUTEER, Jr., #1 


5/13/53 



AMERICAN COMMITTEE EOR THE ADVANCEMENT 0? WESTERN CtMUHBj 
IS-X 


On 4/29/53 SAT 


received the fallowing items from 
J (His -identity 


should be protected-. He can be described aS of known reliability* but whose 
sources are unknown.) (%ese items can be serialized in thin fila) 

(1) February 34-36. 1953 Report re AOAWO s ’ 

THOMPSON is anxious to get the AOAWO organized. WEISS is helping 
THOMPSON in Ihis -endeavour.- 

5he following are being considered for participation in the AOAWO? 


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1 


Dr. 3BEATTY, author of "THE IRON CURTAIN OVER AMERICA" 

Prof. QHAKGSS TAHSIWi, author of "THE BACK DQOR TO WAR” . , : - 

State Senator JACK TENNEY of California . , 

General VAN HGRJVMO.BELEY of England 

Rear Admiral RICHARD EL. BYRD (has .contacted him, but doubts if he will)) , 

(participate) ' ■ 

BEN PJSSSDMAN , a sex deviate. (THOMPSON wants Preedruan to finance the 
■ ; . a . (AOAWO and to be a contact man with the Arabs) , 

(3) April 3. 1953 Report re AOAWO ’ ■ * 

Aims and Objectives, Procedure, Organization, andTeifetive Personnel 
• of aoawo set forth. . ■ 

■h ^ Tentative Personnel. Consists of the following ?• * 

• - • THOMPSON,. National Chairman ~ - . • . 

PLECKENSTEEH, Counsel 

WEISS, Executive Secretary ./ • - v 

EUSTACE CLARENCE MULLINS, Treasurer and financial advisor.' 

(Mullins is . a financial writer and author of ## n MULLIHS OH TIDE)) 

(PEDERAL RESERVE) 

(continued on page 2) 


I cc 105- SI 13 (national Renaissance PartvYr 

: • JSXL' INFORMATION -CONTAINED 

- ' V HEREIH IS UNCIASSIF1ED 


SEARCHED,..™. — .INDEXED 

SERIALIZED..)fc^nL£D..^^ 

. MAY. 1 3 1S53 ' ^ 

FBI - NEW YORK 






Pag© 2(109-607 




GUY 0* STEPHENS* Editorial Advisor, editor of "The INDIVIDUA1IST" 


Advisorv Staffs 




R^STpk! 


A copy of a letter from , PETER 1. XAVIER, Author and lecturer, 

16 South Patterson Blvd, Dayton, 2, Ohio, to Weiss, Sated 3/3/1953 
indicates that WEISS is a sparkplug in theACAWC. 


e following: 


attended hy 


WEISS 

EUSTACE 


JAMES. MABOIiB 

THOMPSON 

ELECKENSTEIN 






ection to oei 
Wm KOET KESRTIG, I 
publisher of"B?he MiiiVIJJUAUS'i' 1 ' : 

Names to he on ACAWO letter head: 
THOMPSON 
MUHINS 

'mss 

MADOLE 


|ahd Guy STEPHENSON 

Ln Yirginia,will cooperate. " \ 


(continued on page3) 





HBJr., 105-6071 


2 South American Germans who were recommended, "b 
Editors of Swiss and IPrench publications 
3?he mm' GRASP ■ MOM 1 ! 


HBBSIQ 


STEpmms - . : ? .. . 

SHOMPSOit Slated that he had been^offered a substantial sum by the 
4*ab legation in Washington, D. 0. if the ASAWA' gets going* Printing 
to be done in the print shop of gH0MpS01f*s father, HYO. THOMPSON 
received a letter ^from the Grand Mufti in whihh he gave THOMPSON the 
name of an Arab in NT to contact. 


MADOXiE stated that the National 
in Queens with the. assistance o 
ing the EBP set forth. ‘ 



arty plans, to hold' meetings 
Other information conern- 




10 . 64 * ' 


Office Memomndum 


9 e 




TO 


KK.OM 


SUBJECT: 


SAC, Hew York (105-6112) 

SA EDWARD W, BUTLER, Jr. , #1 
RATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY; 


• UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT 

DATE: 5/13/53 ' 


IS-X 


□ On 5/6/1953 . 

made available to SA [ 





TSb ^folTowiiag it'ems7~w£icfi‘ n can~De 


serialized and made «■ p a*+-i£-P t.iio nacp -PttT: ( Sap -p-Koy-^rmg memorandaz with regard 
to the handling of this information from 


b6 

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(l) Jan. 13-27. 1953 Report re National Rennaisance Party .(NRP) 

On 1/13/53 HRP held meetin g, at 169 E. 86th Street, N YC, JAMES MADOLE,. 
leader. E. 0. E. WEISS an q I (phonetic) | | 


fbut did not attend meeting. 


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• MADOLE sppoke at meeting. He was not as anti-semetic as in the ppast, 

He ! questioned the right of the U.\S. in" Korea and took the position of 
a pro-Communist .neutral with regard to Korea and. Communist China.. He 
v/as viciously . antiiTruman. ' ' ; , . 

A. 0. TIIIMAN spoke as the substitute for an Arab speaker who. was expected 
but did not appear. TITTMAN paid for a recent issiie of the Rational . 
Rennaisance Bulletin. He spoke on, behalf of the Arabs and against Isreal. 

Persons in attendance at the meeting: . . 

' MADOLE . . ... 

A. 0. TITTMAN . • ' * 

EUSTICE MULLINS ■ ■ 

]_ ‘ _ 



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' ^ < Mrs* MADOLE, Mother of ! JAMBS MADOLE 

■ ^ * * ' . t L . ■ , ■ . 

02 ) Jan. 1953 NATIONAL RENNAISANCE BULLETIN Material -Report dated 2/4/53 

Discusses material in the dan. 1953 NR Bulletin. See actual 
bulletin in 1A envelope.- ' 



c NY 100-111893* (W|iss) 

. MX_IHF0RMATI0N contained 




Held at 2nd Avenue and 87th St,, HYC at 8 i 15PM. 

MADOLE spoke. Said he was proud to "be a Pascist .and a Nazi. Plans 
to hold meetings in Queens. THOMBBOH not at meeting, "but met with 
MADOLE after the meeting. . ’ 


^Following persons in attendance: 



Held at 2nd Avenue and 87th Street, FYG, 9:00PM. 

MADOLE made his usual type speech. THOMPSON spoke against the 
atrocities, committed hy the Arabs by the Israeli’ s. A p’p arehtly 
MADOLE is in tpuch with the, Arabs. , ” 

landlord ,'at 169 E. 86th Street; HYC, where EBP holds indoor meetings 
will not renew lease if meetings of the same type continue. MADOLE 
lost his joh when his employer read of the recent' publicity BARRY GRAY 
of 'the IT. Yi Post gave him recently. . . , • ^ . 






~7 \ .REPBRfS ^ ' '■&vl?*&s:.. 7 

•'• ,• JiN« 13 -TO 


jan> * i3-2?-7»33 V- 7 - ' ; 7 


O 


:, . < ^iafic fg$K^:fiE£D' M?M&. 'X*:#b:W%i NtO', -7, 

- \itiBS-i &^--M®29L& the LSADER 7^7 7 v> 


’ .. ■’ Arriving, at. the . flail befor^^ ofcloac^ 'a ^«porte^; foimS>2 ^tan^ormeid^ *", 7 1 
’ v -. . polieeneh'in ^ of theafeyj; ; 4^; jhe-^dop^ leading a up-.^ ^e-7’7- .77 

.; '. ijjfct -tfaAilbg' r *as -feeing held;' ^ jMJ; aWutr'-'^^p.^'iv^'-^;- 1 ^' '*3f 

% J^liCapar* Sgt*. The; S^stahfeed v , 7?^-*v7 '•'• tl ^C--‘ •’• <& 

7 , -f&STAGE JlGlLINSy *ho waff H^.,1her-^reet, whe^er l^gaLR las- topnnd* ’ / Vv 
• ., ;#*• Showed; direct ; :fie ;ta^eel* t.Q: fpr'a feW ffiiiiuW# 7- : : 7> 

7 '••ttien v «eat;i«\thd : Bf«4l^^ 7Beforehe \m$'£hte», • 

' he Weaii inliP the fcis^d^i'Sg' ^dtA&a&^o^ with V-a man. , who had been waiting ', , 

" ,' . &>** hjm * ' -This ‘man &g'&hfe f4llaw. : no# m^tn^k. -,7 \-, -cf\..- --X / .-. : , ./’ •• 

7y, KphoAetjo) * ' -V j\ ■■:*•, •• •' .•"• V'-^.-.v' - ''77 ‘n7«7 


: s?i ' ; ^iOiFif-WEESS Snd l h lldynot. attend* thi &' iaeetibg-,7 : ^- 

net with MADOLE across the 'street Tihere , M4DG££-'-^d.di.Ved-. : 'hi8‘’ instructions ' ^-;'- 
’ • .' ; fpj*';ihh jath : 'tin#*\ . SreBtt&dQ^ift to 14’ pebpiy . and-’etmongsti thfeni,-*- ”‘ 'l7 b6 % 

„ MRSVMBOLS . (tiothfebl another Woman ,7 .Vt-h' renftrt.pr~ .vt . .TfflflS MADOLE- . ^ c 
I 1 . ... [ £QSTACiE MIlLLlSS.m &a is said V i ■> v . 

to be Hying at[ Ica g# of somebody, J l aonieg 3. ;ft T -: 

.: . f ro ml l ^hpeVhrey.) .fc« J | »he 'hdtfaa*<WiftitY 

,- ;;' MADOtE and'whovCQhstahtl^l^ | [ 7^ 

\ although at' that t&ae.h* ijfebr hh/was:|)rbbab^;C:4'V^:; 

• ; *i6 or l^yeahs $Ld*-> ,77 
7? a . %£: .. ;'. ^ieo.. A.-O’* t&e maxi froa-^fs Gardeii^#' jbhe, advocate • t , s ' 

» of^ ijs^SacVes in. ,*^V V hfers ago in the G onsniar ' Servic e t a \S - ' ..i: 

‘ -oatephleteer and* on in' y ears ,«.« j |.,J [.. 7' ' : ' : 7 V %6' . , ; 


ohleteer and* 


reported, 


«ttjjd--)t^sr . others:, ^'dp^* t; knoWV -ah ( d Sipol^he Hy>.; • f-b 7 c 


t- '.77 ^EADpLE begad b^' ■apologising: for' ^he \sme^;,attbndahps ,^7 ’ blamed oaf - 
;•• : ’ a :-'7. : \, the bus atrik^.- • 4|fe ; mailep- Pnt • ^50 inyltations^ r anil' then Trent inth . hiiV : .. 

•s '., ;; '' splei.7 He did not de^tefepn ^eTTewS -toni^t, <«ly,ire^i&r^g ^. 

:• V.v ’i: :• ,dh connection- tdth thd ne^ai^C; being -pur^ned pi^er' subU ->'>.'• -7 

* 7 — * ; ;7 - 7 Yersiyes in ;the U;^ .^th ^g^rd ;to, |ecl China. r fihd the , Soviets.^ Sol‘ ,f '. ?- /'•" 

•Ai 7 'f ' . , followed, .the liiie 9ed» - 4 #»¥|e , af . hif • ,:v-~7 

‘•-- '' -i ' ^bdudes : ; part • ‘b£'^h,preyionS -tirades' ; 8 nd<Wbiefr : is* ; ^ 

''•77^ ;. ;^e^a^$a&e:; isfiftted’%- -0^9.; '-.r\ ; -;7 ’7777'- -7- 

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./ V;' ’, '^&ed. . t^.isaae iashion-as would a- pro^onmi^iy ip t. rj^utraj- 7u- 

*^7.V' : . ■ V •■ «hA:;*i5hat . aadji# China w&nt^7c.0oiw^^* : 

v-i'rlMrSi -' their busihesp"4^.ibfig;a# not fotf ’ 4 ?gpeirt dnd the^ ' 

;$iy?Pi-S , -thehbeiyes ,;>«. ftpia' both. sidei..(meahing7' < - \ : 

7:--*. ‘'in' : Ehs,sia and -^l^ericaf ■ end j(on have. ; ,peaca: ' ';. 

>^;. 7 V 7 " 4! . ; v 1 he Jewh_alone ane ^eM»ampngerai^ 7 ; ; he : -'tal^d'';p&^ 

‘7 Vl .'V'ASix milii^P^. ?i3xereas •;the / 'C'4^|h;'p0pni ^!toid;ijx.Geiffiany bbtora^;*^ 


SMA» xs *a rat.y p.B -then- inf . . b 
etingsy^whit^' wo^d ;b^ conducted in. 4 Aprp;«;>'i ' 7 

ftfe £i, •■ (»° r ?) : 


77i7 : 77\7 ; ^5s7> -p7^^-?g77 


- * * .y; , -2 £-b7c 

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,,.- •;ir#V4?i.»53 r -r- . y- : yyy -•; yyy>vyy^yr y>:; f y7^k'7"^.v-b7D 7 

.-■ «5"AMES SAD0LB, ^HEPAEBS iSt ASTTdLI? -£Y5ft .t>sb itiwi-w - : .* * " : •; 


■ «• -«0®w » *•* 

. CS-UiaCS Ox 'iHltil.‘-iaQSi'()£jSr5. f. hy ^nf>hdttti ’ Ht-~ wn^i-l ' >■?;, _* ■>» '■' ----v~'<- v ... 

. : y ^ 



*■ b ^ y ^ ’Vv : y ty ^ *y v v 7y ” y , ‘ ^ 



ySiiisfwaaNth.e' first ^re.et'^eqtl^ of -^iiirearl'^ Strand it, 

:. ••-: * yTras-ikj^sress^ ©£’$do)?le> % fcaikoi^ed ^pattcem^ 

_..*.; •’>. .- .and -st the peak of the^eeting’, there waste ho more .than 20 amtl tw 3 in oi jhl p' * 
•■'•-o^tt fritods. The ’intermittaht. -• : teafa^ifiDi*cej9; of busy; Ate.madd it''; , 

* t , r - •-, ? , diff ihdlt .from., time ; to 'time to heat- M&DOLE. ; ■ ' ' ';" . : • “ ■ " , - -■ .; - ' •:. -' 

? . and ' y.y- }*"■'•- Y-‘‘ y.;/ 'yV> y . Vy- 

viNVv’* - I I held ihe flag.^eafing/his .Germans. p^aS»d;.js^-' 6hd= his ‘y Yy' 

’ -•:.' «. y ghorfr4aeket.y Present.'' al so were ..y -ly > ' yy- ' y y . b7c . 

■Y Y 1 l and 5 other followers, /ifedole* s mother was 

Y/. y-' yabs^t.'yY Yy T' ■ - •■ 

... - *' -talk proud of ... 

Fascistyand,: a’ llaai. . • fh^r. ;ha ve.. got;to. get ; six;3iiches -of steel**:. •... 


^' 5 ,hhTe'.got >to *%et; the same.. oonceutratiqn^ camps as .they ^ got, in: Germany , • 
?{/ td get-rid; gf -them -snd- ‘thei "sooner, the bettervy -y. 

-wont' be - done- with iche Democratic dr the'5Debhbllchn 'oartles ah‘& their. 


Y. "v.: 1 V YsYi£t*wohi' Ije'-doae^ with' the.D^ dr. the : 5 Republidan 'parties ;ah‘d their 

•’• - politicians He ashpimced the next, street meeting for FriVi^ght'l®^ Si-tin. 


;’y- yy He* announced’ the; indoor; meeting for. Sat, night; May. ^b.; He also' sfeiSd 

/•'.<, .-that he - wrnld hold meetings. i* •Qrtfcens*- He^' apologised ^p^-^OWSXM *.$ absence.] 
y ' . Y 'bttt that he . would speak tomorrow night. - ; y '•' .: '. a : t; ' ' ' '- • - • 

^ ;* • %• a^' k tepm .to meVname^w^th -.on. ^d/'Av^V-s^id' .moti^sd^th'l l;lhen ' 

. . I :j^sper'ed'.ih'' his :,S^V;^iad6le 'became 6 '?•.] 

9* : t> t^S^/he closed- ;th’“ T-^ 7C - 

. '••. .street meeting. ’ 'fle^old! thd police h$ 8V«pe^cd5 r .'^& Aotr/SMesa;#!,- 



.J \ .>vt doingliadt borne . fruit. A' little: later 1 isafir-lladole "and Thompson and a ' 

■" ( >-f X .$e#.ofvhisj people: ih;the" lobby, of ^ ^'-lo'ewfs •-Theatre.-.'. at- 16^ .Then J- ] . 


^ ^ ’’ 1 : r It" * ^ *Vv" v : ’ : v V7 Jt 






f V c. : : - 


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r'-,^ * 


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^ Yy * ^ ^ v*« r 7 ^ ' y < > , ■ :y *'*' J '*^* 11 : ^ ^ ° ^ . y <_ ’ 





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& 7 c 


';'■ v*. '(mtting'-Mg^m^elK&g short '-d&ty'Jflli -f X'fhad; les^^T8S!ri£^^^*^e:.'ne«£k that . 
. y . ; ” .'there .were; some .indecisidns^.u^ ^s^'.’-(^wT>al^S^ia^!S&}' 5 tad, th&fe -•• { ; ' /' 

;. :<a’7 .. -'. *• '.reported that- the 'Street. aieetihgs 'TTould -be- .held. / / • V- v b.'.. >_i "'• 7? ' 


, ; „j ,- . ■ •ihetaiwSer' of ' 

; v,-.- /the^-hhll'hhd rh.c;e.i7e'd ; a lhtt% 7 : frqtf..the ‘.owneha, of:, 'the -building ,• stating- = : b 6 ‘ , 

/ ^ 't H .oocro lfffWi/ 4 - Vir'v'^ Vich 1 - ~ b 7 C 


t 


b7C 

b7D 

It < 


b ‘o ;nxg‘ place s 

’ -that. there Tri.l~t ~h*» rin .fet.jTig 7"** g 1 ** t™"*' - -' 

spd his cek crew would meet ' 

Street V. ; 
crowd - 



U "t' ltoi^^g-^irSfi.ai' ''^a^.p^btogjbstghera^; f T^yS_. we^'^eyerpi . 6 7 

• '■■•.- 7 and - the. balanc e of the , peopie ^were ^passershy .; JJJ. told $ ; at -the 'peak- ;of“ b7c . ' 



$?9P* the.; crowd ,'ii* good border :and 7had- -to te&gg ka'.opm lane; fdr 7. /. : 7'::V' 
— J i 3! • '>7, i • ^sifted; &<j$\ |i^^7td[7ti^aV ' :-.Jf he . .traffic iioise was 1 " '7 ,-7*" ' f; 

' '■'■ v ■ ■ ^ s;^ba<i ;h^^la^tH^‘ght • v '. ,^t .i4^^7A"?7^ame7 to ,hear,.fhoinpsdnLbspecifica!l:ly7 , ‘ 

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’ v 'bt * - 7 ^ ' t ^ t b -b, ■- 1 *. y t \ < ■» j ^ * h v , «’* , ’ r * *)£•-? 7 ^ v • ■ 7 O *.* z,m ~ r ~ '* ~ t ' ” ' ’ V - 7 ^' 7 ' + 


SAC* Sew ToTk,iiQ5aie#^/^'5'~ £/*?) 


5/3,4/53 


SA EDWARD tf* Mffl, Jr, 


JAMES H. MADOLE; 

1S—X ** v= 

Jf 


A Review of the files in the UYO reflects that JAMES H. MADOll is 
head of' the BAIIQSA1 REHAIS.SMGE PAEffiT (NT 105-6113)* is active in the 
AMERICAS COMMITTEE FOR IEB AJOTCMENT OF WESOMdT GUIiTURB (SY 60.V1) , 

Was active In the AHIMIS9? PARSET (MY 105-1064)* and has heen active in other 
similiar Masi-Fascist anti^semetic activities* , 7 * 

She attached FB«rl6Q dated 5/13/53 fails to reflect a case file in the 
name of this individual. He resides at 224 E. Main* Street, Beacon, I, Y., hat. 
most of his activities are in HYC and the Vicinity. 

In connection with the BSP and ACAWC cases, which are under active 
investigation, the information' concerning MADOBE will in all probability he 
correlated. A XQ5 dead file should he. opened so as to have a* central location 
for information concerning MADQUh . 


ACOPJOBs Open .a’ dead I06 file per attached ED-*?!. 





\ 

t 


SEARCHED .INDEXED... 

SERIALI2ED....„m^FILED..,^l^.„, 

’ MAY141953 

^ - NEW YORK 

\M~> 


ALL IMFOrMTOT CONTAINED 


STANDARD FORM NO. 64 


UNITED STAGES GOVERNMENT 


SAC,' BUS? YORK 


DATE: HAY 15, 1953 


SUBJECT: I'JATIOMAL RMAISSMCE PARTY ( 105-6112) 


INTERNAL SECURITY - X ■ 



|( use T symbol to protect identity) b 7 c 

' b7D 

was contacted by the waiter on 4 / 13 ? 5/6,7 >15 and he furnished the follor/ing 
information. - - ' 

' He stated that a meeting of the NATIONAL REN AI S SAM CE PARTY was held at 169 
E. 36th Street, NYC on 4/H/53 at which Harold KEITH THOMPSON was introduced ■ 
to the gathering as the NRP candidate for Congress from Yorjjville. Thompson 
also spoke briefly at meeting of the NRP held on $/l and 5/8. These iaetings "■ 

were held outside at 2nd Avenue and 37th' Street and although there vjas a great 

! ■ ( L 1 * 

deal of publicity given them by the New York Post, no incidents occurred. , ' 

' , - '! 'r - 

The informant stated that just prior to this • latter' meeting Thompson was observed 
in the companyof persons in an automobile bearing license number Penna §Z-952. 

It was believed by the informant that these people had come from out of town to 
-hear Thompson speak at the meeting. . ' ' ' . ■ . ' 

1 " The informant said., that Thompson was reported to be very much concerned about, 

.an alleged investigation of his activities by DA Hogan . In connection with this 
investigation the ir^ormant' Said he understood that a DR. HAj^Y BMJMIN, ^Papk Aye. , 
* .NYC , former physician of George, gy lveat^ey Vie reck, had bem, interviewed by 
' Hogan* s'offic.el ' , ' ' ' ./ . ~ , / <. ' 

v ^ 1 j - 1 11 _ 1 1 ' " 1 ' r « - ' 

1 - ..V- -\^ SER ' AL ^ E ^Tp"^?^^" 

■ MAY 1 5 1£53 

•X' 1 - •. FBI pNiw YORK v it , 

1 - 105-6127(3^. ' ^ ■ 

1 (y 


1 - 100 - 111393 ^ b 

n 


<P 


- 2 - 


.. The informant said that JEJ2S IIABOLE had been fired from his job 
because of the publicity he had received recently in the POST in connection 
with the ME? meetings. He said that he beilieved that this job was with the 
■American Aluminium Company, 5jYC and so far as he knew Iladole had not found 
other employment. 

The informant stated t hat ^ originally intended 
sailing for Europe but changed his plans at the last minute and is supposed to 
fly from Idlev.ild on 5/10/53* The purpose or itinerary of this trip is not 
known by the informant however it is noted that Fleckenstein 1 s family still 
owns a home in Bavaria, Germany and Edward Flectenstein has formerly gone there. 
He further stated that Fleckenstein arranged to have his letter to Adenauer 
published for distribution. A copy of this will be furnished by the informant 


later. 


The informant was questioned regarding Rue 


and he stated that 


he knew nothing concerning- this person and had npvr heard his name mentioned inn 
connection mth any of these German activities/ 

The informant was questioned concerning previous infromation he had 
furnished to the effect that HMTS BORZII-ISKI had been the person who allegedly 
put F.C. 17EISS in contact vd.th the 1 Parsleys' . Re said that he has been u table to 
verify this and there is no basis for this previous 'mformation except that 
Borzinski had driven a car for Weiss on several occasions. The informant added 

c 

that he learned that TJeiss was supposed to go to Washington during the week of the 
10th of Hay but that this was later cancelled. This purposed trip was in 
connection with a purposed meeting with the'Ruskys’ . The informant said that 
Ueiss had taken extreme precautions regarding this trip to keep it secret and 
in fact had been very "sub rosa" in his dealings with his contacts during the 
past few weeks. 


♦. J . '• 

FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION 

m SECURITY INFORMATION ■ gSKM 

INATEDAT YORK • FlCb NO. 


REPORT MADE AT 


BOSTON 



PERIOD FOR WHICH MADE I REPORT MADE BY 


^ 8 °, ii 6 , 13/53 SA PAUL M * rothermel 


CHARACTER OF CASE 


NEO-NAZI MOVEMENT IN THE UNITED STATES 


INTERNAL SEOURITY-X 


SYNOPSIS OF FACTS: 


ascLASS: 
3SU 


APPROVED AND 
FORWARDED: 


Neo-Nazi Movement in the United States 'being 
promoted by National Renaissance Party. 

Informant indicates National Renaissance 
Party synonymous with Voters Alliance,- Demo- 
cratic, Nationalist Party of the United States 
ef North America and Neo-Nazi Party. National 
Renaissance Party plans to change name in event 
organization labeled subversive. National. 
Renaissance Party opposed to Communism, 
governments of western Germany and the United 
States, Anti-Semitic, Pro-Nazi and dedicated 
to work for release of all German war criminals. 
Headquarters of group believed to be at 169 1 

East 86th Street, New York City; 22 4 East 
Main Street, Beacon, New York; and Mt . Hope 
Farm, Middleoorough, New York. Group has no 
known officers as such. Leaders and members 
of ^National Renaissance Pa? ty set out and 
identified. Organization held three meetings 
during summer, 1952,. attended only by leaders 
of National Renaissance Party. Rally held on 
4/11/53, Hew York City, with thirty-forty 
persons present, Private informal gathering 
followed 4/11/53 rally in Hotel Belleclaire, 

New York City. -H. KEITH THOMPSON and JAMES 
MADOLE speakers at instant rally. Meeting 
scheduled for 5/2/53 cancelled. National 
Renaissance Bulletin official organ of National 
Renaissance Party, published three issues in 


SPECIAL AGENT 
IN CHARGE 


DO NOT WRITE IN THESE SPACES 



jX 9-Bureau 

a 6 £A\Q)New York (105- 7069 ) 

V 2-Newark 
1° 2- Chicago 

2-Boston (I05rl004) 


PROPERTY OF FBI — This confl3!te*fl[jalreport and its contents are loaned to you by the FBI and are not to be 


distributed outside of agency to^&ich ioar 
.imrcraf $2 








Bsio5-ioo4 


1952, namely, April, July, and October 
issues. Democratic Nationalist Party 
of the United States of North America 
issued booklet entitled ’’DNP” • National 
Renaissai ce Party unsuccessfully attempted / 
to infiltrate Steuben Society of Chicago, 
Illinois, during 19 £2 and in April, 1953* 
organization was interested in securing 
HANS RUDEL, a German citizen, as speaker 
for organ izat.^on# 


-P- 


DETAILS:*- At Boston, Massachusetts 

All the information emanating from Boston 
Informant T-l was provided by him during April, 1953* . 

Informant T-l, of unknown reliability, stated that during 1952 
and 1953 the organizations hereinafter se~t out have- been the 
groups interested in promoting Neo-Nazi Movement in the 
United States. The Informant stated this movement is 
presently being directed by the National Renaissance Party* 

T-l stated that the National Renaissance Party has been 
identified to. him by leaders of this group during 1952 
and 1953* as the Voters .Alliance, the Democratic National- 
ist Party of the United States of North America, and the 
Neo-Nazi Party. T-l said from his observations during the 
period August, 1952, to April, 1953* it- was his belief that 
all of the aforementioned groups referred to one and the 
same organization and that at the present time this organi- 
zation was going under the name of the NauS.onal Renaissance 
Party, 

T-l stated, as a precaution ary measure to inai re that t&e 
organization continues in existence and to prevent 
unfavorable newspaper publicity, leaders of this group 
stated they would change the organization'^ name as soon 
as any subversive label was attached to the group under 
its present name. The Informant stated this policy of 
.^hanging the organization^ name may account for the fact 
that it has been known under a number of different nanes 
since its inception^ • 

T-rl stated H. KEITH THOMPSON, FREDERICK WEISS, aid EDWARD 
A. FLECKENSTEIN, "leaders of the National Renaissance' 


- 2 - 


•v- 


I 

B S105-10(% 



Party during 19^2 and 1953, referred to the organization 
as the "Neo-Nazi- Movement" in -private . Informant stated 
these individuals Wv.re careful however* hover to refer to 
the organization as the "Neo-Nazi Movement" in public. 

I. ORIGIN. SCOPE MD GENERAL ACTIVITIES OP THE 
NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 

The National Renaissance Party will be referred to herein- 
after as the NiR.P-., . 

V' 

T-l stated he did not know >hen the N .R .P • came into - 
existence nor did he know any facts surrounding the origin 
of the N.R.P* 

T-l stated that while the N.R.P. is ostensibly national in. | 
scope, the only activity of the organization is centered 
in the state of New York. He stated the N.R.Pi has its 
headquarters in New York City, is a loosely formed grfeup, 
is opposed to Communism, the present government of western 
Germany* the present-. United States Government, and is Anti** 
Semitic and pro-Nazi. 

Concerning the actual headquarters of the N.R.P., T-l 
said he believed the group used a private hall at 169 . 

East 86th Street, New York City, for all mootings and . 
rallies of a public and semi-public nature 0 Concerning 
other possible headquarters for the group, T-l stated it 
was his understanding the N.R.P. had some sort of a 
permanent office at 22ij. East Main Street, Beacon, New York* 
T-l said he did not know the significance of the N.R.P. 
offioe in Beacon* New York, but believed it to be the head- 
quarters for. the printing and distribution of the N.R.P. 
literature , 

The Informant revealed that in addition to the aforementioned, 
addresses the N.R..P* also meets on a frequent basis at; 
the Mt. Hope Farm, Middieborough, New York, which farm is 
owned by FREDERICK WEISS • The Informant based his opinion 
that these meeti ngs wore being conducted at this farm on 
a freauent basis. \ 


The Informant stated that mos t of the important busihoss of 
the N.R.P. is conducted at this farm by leaders of the 
group. T-l stated before any person, other 'then one of 
the loaders of the N,R*P., can attend .any meetings held 
on the farm, the permission of FREDERICK WEISS has to be 
obtained* 





L 



BS10£-100ij. 




According to the Informant the N.R.P* hopes to increase 
its size and importance by drawing membership from 
college students. 

T-l stated the N.R.P. is opposed to the imprisonment of 
former Nazi leaders and is dedicated to working for their 
release. The ■ Informant stated the members of the N.R.P, 
always excuse Germany and the Nazi Party of any blame for 
World War II, T-l stated the members of the N.R.P.- believe 
that the alliance of the United States during World War II 
should have been with Germany and against the Soviet Unio n, j . 

II . OFFICERS OP THE NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 


Boston Informant T-l stated -the N.R.P. has no officers as 
such but from his observation during 1952 and 195>3> 
belioved the' following were acting as leaders of this group: 

FREDERICK WEISS : The informant stated he believed WEISS 

to be the secret guiding force behind 
the N,R,P« in the United States. He, said WEISS is the 
person who makes all important decisions of the N.R.P. and 
is the person that leaders of the N.R.P* consult on all 
policies, T*-l stated WEISS does extensive traveling in 
the United Statos which the Informant believes is organiza- 
tional work. on behalf of the N.R.P, 

H. KEITH THOMPSON : T-l stated THOMPSON £s. a public front fer 

.the N.R.P*’ and is usuaL ly the guest 
speaker at all N*R*P» meetings, 

EDWARD A.FLECKENSTEIN t Trl stated FLECK EN3TEIN has actod 

as legal advisor to the N.R.P. since 

the summer of 1952., 

RAY FOSTER : . T-l stated RAY FOSTER has acted as 

youth organizer of the N.R.P. since the 

summer of 1952. 

JAMES MADOLE : T-l -stated MADOLE is head of. the N*R.P. 

Beacon, New York, although he did not 
know what position MADOEE held in that city. 

T-l stated from his observation of the N.R.P. during 1952 
and 1953> he believes .the following individuals are acting 
as official - unofficial advisors of the N.R.P; 


- 4 - 



BSlOS-lOOij. 


t * 


FREDERICK WEISS 
H. KEITH THOMPSON 
EDWARD A. FLECK ENSTEIN 
RAY FOSTER 

GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERICK 

J 

III.’ FURTHER IDENTITY OF OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF . 

THE NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTY 

FREDERICK WEISS . • 

T-l described WEISS as a writer of Political Science whose 
w> rks were favorable to Germany under Nazi rule , Informal t 
stated WEISS has a home - at 156 Grand Street# White Plains, 
-New York, but usually resides on the Mt, Hope Farm which 
is near Middloborough, New York, T-l stated WEISS has 
used this farm as a meeting placo for such members of the 
N.R.P, as H. KEITH THOMPSON, GECRGE SYLVESTER VIERICK, 

EDWARD A. FLECKENSTEIN and RAY FOSTER, 

The Informant said WEISS is extremely cautious regarding 
outsiders .and usually remains in the background of N.R.P, 
meetings, . . 

T-l stated that during the summer of 1952, THOMPSON referred 
to WEISS as "the "in-between man” between the N.R.P, and 
the “real people T-l stated ho did not know what THOMP- 
SON meant by the "real people"’ but belioves from subse- 
quent conversation that THOMPSON referred to certain miss- 
ing Nazi leaders- allegedly hiding in South America, 

Informant stated WEISS has openly boasted that he was one 
of the instigators of the riot which occurred in Peekskill, 
Now York during the appearance of PAUL ROBESON, The Infor- 
mant said he had no knowledge of the truth or falsity of 
this statement other than WEISS * own admission. 

On July 5, 191^.9-, the Washington Times-Herald, a daily news- 
paper published in Wadiington, D,C,, contained an article 
which reported that MANNING JOHNSON, an ex-Communist Party 
leader, told a Congressional Committee on July 4, 19ii.9,that 
PAUL ROBESON had been a Communist Party member for many 
years , ' , 

T-l stated WEISS has often boasted that he (WEISS) had 
sources of information in political groups and law enforce- 
ment agencies in the United States, Informant said WEISS 
did not elaborate on this statement or identify any of his 
sources of information, 

* 5 - 



Bsio^-rooi}. 


• T^l described WEISS as Pro-Nag; i in that he excuses the 
Nazis for any blame in World War II and because he desires 
release of all Nazi war criminals * 

T-l stated he recall d that RAY POSTER mentioned during 
19!?2 that WEISS used a mail drop to conduct N.R.P* business 
but the informant was unable to amplify on this statement* 

T-l described WEISS as an alien in his sixties and 
an ex-Army captain in the German artillery during World 
War I. 

The Informant further advised that WEISS has large hold- 
ings in Real Estate and apartment houses in the Now York 
City area. . 

T-l said H. KEITH THOMPSON and RAY POSTER stated dhring 
19£2 that WEISS donated a considerable amount of money 
obtained from revenue through theso holdings to the N.R.P* 

■ H. KEITH THOMPSON 
380 Main Street, Apartment 13 
Chatham, New Jersey 

r , 

T-l stated THOMPSON has ■ addressed at least one meeting of 
the N*R.P» and is generally- recognized as a leader of the 
N.R*P* T-l said THOMPSON has a large collection of pic- 
tures of World War II, Nazi le aders, ' which collection THOMP- 
SON, prizes highly* 

T-l described THOMPSON as pro-Nazi, Anti-Semitic and pro- 
Arab. Concerning THOMPSON’S being prb»Arab, the Informal t , 
explained that .THOMPSON believes ‘ in complete independence 
from all foreign control for all the Arabic nations as well! 
as absorption of the state of Israol by the adjoining 
Arab states* 

The Informal t staged in addition to being the recognized 
leader of the N.R.P., THOMPSON maintains in his home a 
complete file of'SLl members of the N.R.P, including photo- 
graphs of all members. . : b7D 


T-l stated during April, 1953> I 

with THOMPSON and inquired of the latter how he bo came 
associated with the- Neo-Nazi Movomeht and THOMPSON replied 
"I acted as a courier for our party when I was 16 years 
old.” THOMPSON, according to the Informant, did not 
elaborate .on this statement and it would be only conjecture 


6 - 


BS10S-100L|. 



on his part to surmise what THOMPSON meant* 

Informant stated THOMPSON is an ex-Navah officer of -the 
United States Navy and is rogistored as- a foreign agent 
for the ’’Naz i Pa^rty” ■ 

T-l said THOMPSON has received literature from OTTO REMER, 
head of the revived Nazi Party in Germany* T— 1 stated he 
did not know what other connection THOMPSON had with 

- ‘ hut was aware that THOMPSON held REMER 'in high- . . 

esteem,. 

* • EDWARD A . FLECKENSTEIN 

,, 39 King Avenue 

Weehawken, Now Jersey 

T-l stated FLECKENSTEIN acts as le gal advisor to the N.R.P, 
.and meets frequently with THOMPSON, WEISS and FOSTER. T-l 
described FLECKENSTEIN as pro-Nazi, opposed to the present 
United States Government, and a former member of the Voters 
Alliance.' Informant stated FLECKENSTEIN 1 s parents aro 
' opposed to his association with the NiR*P*-and are exerting 
pressure on him to discontinue his association with this 
group , 


T-l stated 



is an employee o f the 
1 T-l stated [ 


several years and. nas found him t o be imp erialistic an 


militaristic* T-l explained that | |believes in 

Naziism to the extent that he wants the power and prestige 
that membership and leadership in' the Neo-Nazi Group would 
bring, 

T-l described as Anti-Semitic and a Pro“^ az i who 

is violently opposed to the present western Germany and . 
United States governments, - 

T-l seated | ~l is supplying information -to the N*R*P*. 

- jn > 1. J J J 


Informant stated 


The Informant said THOMPSON did not state where, , 

got this information or what information THOMPSON .fnrni sh ed b6 

7 . . I * * > • 1 t i . ♦ • 1- I I 


to the NRP but it is the Informant's opinion that , 
uses the' information that comos into his possession through 


b6 

b7C 


b6 

b7C 

b7D 


b7C 


T 



b6 

b7C 





BSlO^-lOOij. 


the 1 
N.R'.P* 


for the benefit of the 


JAMES. MADOLE 


T-l stated he knew very little concerning MADOLE oi^her 
than he was allegedly head of the N.R.P, in Beacon, New 
York. The Informant stated during his brief- acquaintance 
with MADOLE, he came to know him as a fanatic believer in 
Naziism as evidenced by his conversation concerning Nazi 
'Germany and the Nazi Party. T~i stated he could not recall 
however, any . specific statement, made by MADOLE indicating 
his adherence to the Nazi form of government,. 

GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERICK 
250 West 77th Street 
New York 


The' Informant stated this individual is employed asa writer 
and described VIERICK as a pro-Nazi who previously served 
a sentenco in a Federal penitontiary for subversive 
activitiy on behalf of the Nazis, 


T-l stated VIERICK has been present at several meetings 
held during 1952 at WEISS* farm in Middloborough, New York, 
where other leaders of the NRP wore present, >T-1 stated 
VIERICK, like WEISS, . usually remains in the background 
and is not openly known as a member of the N.R.P. 


T-l stated during 1952 and- 1953 the following individuals, 
had been identifiedto him as members of the N.R.P. 


FNTJ 


(Phonetic) 


This person is wealthy &Etd resides in the vicinity ‘of the 
WEISS farm near MiddleborQUgh, Nov; York, and according to 
T-l, is extremely pro-Fascist and is a large donatcr to 
the N ,R »P » 


b6 

b7C 


. MRS. FREDERICK WEISS- 

This individual is known to T-l as the wife of FREDERICK 
WEISS and according to, T-l, has' the same sympathies as. . 
her husband 

- 8 - 


L 


BS105-100I|. 


’V 



* 





FNU VAN NUYS (PHONETIC) 

This individual is "an autographed picture dealer , in his 
fifties, £>i£ n , 2$0 lbs, with grayish dark hair and is 
heavy set. T-l knows -this person as a member of the N.R.P, 
who has attended N.R.P. meetings', * ; / ' 


T-l knows this 


f 


erson as a mem ber of the N.R.P,. 
who resides in 


an d 


as a 


FNU 


This individual is in his thirties, | | 

and according to T-l, was present at N«R,.P. meetings wL th 
his wife, • , 


be 

blC 


he 

blC 


FNU KURGO or KURGEL (PH) 

This individual is. from Chicago, Illinois, and is allegedly 
head of the Steuben, Society in that city. T-l', described 
this person as a former German Army officer in World War 
I who is approximately seventy years of ago, 

IV. INDIVIDUALS SYMPATHETIC TO THE NATIONAL' RENAISSANCE 
PARTY BUT NOT KNOWN TO BE MEMBERS OF THE N.R.P. . 


• " • BARON WILLIAM FRARY VON BLOMBERG : 

233 Marlborough -Street 
Boston, Massachusetts 

T-l stated during April, 19^3, • EDWARD A. FLECKENSTEIN des- 
cribed BLOMBERG- as sympathetic to the general aims -of the 
N,R,P, although not an actual member or connected with the 
organization, ■ \ 

V, ' MEETINGS OF THE NATIONAL RENAS STANCE PARTY 

T-l stated the N.R.P. held at least three meetings during 
the summer of 1952 at the Mt. Hope Farm, M^adleborough. ' 
New York. I f , 


T-l stated he couldnot recall the specific dates the 
meetings occurred although he did romember that all three 


1-9- 




L. 


# • 


bsio5-i®o4 

meetings occurred during weekends. The Informant stated 
he did nob know the purpose of these meetings or any dis- 
cussions that took place • - 

T-l stated an NiRjP* meeting in the form of a rally was 
held at a private hall* 169 Bast 86th Street, New Yorkj 
on )|/ll/5>3* T-l stated approximately 30 to persons 
attended this rally and among those present were H< KEITH 
THOMPSON,* FNU VAN NXJYS, JAMES MADOLE, end JACK VON MARQUARDT, 
as. well as two unknown women from the delegation cf 
German Chancellor KONRAD ADENAUER who was then visiting 
the United States, 

T-tl stated THOMPSON was the featured speaker and delivered 
a speech, do scrihod by the Informant as bitterly Anti- 
Semitic. THOMPSON also. urged -the group to make speeches' 
on stroot corners and to attempt to persuade college stu- 
dents to join the N.R.P, 

informant said MADQLE followed THOMPSON as a speaker and 
made remarks similar to those previously made by THOMPSON 
in the lattor l s speech-. 


T-l said admission to the meeting was obtained by present- 
ing at the door a postcard announcement of the meeting* 
which had previously been maiDe d out* 



T-l stated a meeting of the N.R.P* was scheduled for May 
2, 195>2, but was unexpectedly- cancelled. The Informant 
stated ho did not know why the mooting was cancelled. 


- 10 . 


BS10£-100lj. 


VI. STATED AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OP THE NATIONAL RENAISSANCE 

PARTY • 



52 and 1953 

the objectives o] 


were 5 


(1) To work for the release of all German war criminals, 

(2) Combat the present Government of western Germany and 
Gorman Chancellor KONRAD ADENAUER. 

( 3 ) To oppose Communism , 

T-l furnished a postcard in April, 19£3> announcing an 
N,R,P, rally on April 11, 1953* This postcard stated 
"our task is the consolidation of all German, . Hungarian 
and Irish racial groups and secondly, the gaining of 
influence for a show of power in Amorican politics," 

T-l furnished a booklet issued by the Democratic Nationalist 

•Party of the United States of North American which book- 

let I b 7 D 

| This booklet sets forth tno following aims* 
of tho Democratic Nationalist Party? 

(1) To promote the cause of Democratic Nationalism i-\ uv 
folkland, the United States of North Ameripa, 

(2) . To increase the sense of social, economic, political 

and racial responsibility in our white folk who are 
members of our folk community, 

( 3 ) To advance the spirit of friendship and good fellow- 
ship in our folk community, 

(4.) To safeguard our white folk from all alien enemies 
within our folkland through orderly and regular 
participation in local state and national politics 

VII ' LITERATURE PUBLISHED BY THE NATIONAL RENAISSANCE 
PARTY,' ; ‘ ■ 

T-l provided the April, .July and October, issues of the 
National Renaissance Bulletin-, self-identified as the 
official organ of the NRP, 

Ihe April, 19^2 issue contained an article by JOHN M, 

LUNDOFF entitled "Fascism Versus Communism" and an article 

— 13L—. 



# ♦ 


BSlO^-lOOl* ^ 

by JAMES H. MADOLE entitled "The Eisenhower Fiasco in 
Germany".. The article "Fascism Vs* Communism" is an 
anti-Semitic article which states Democracy is unable 
to successfully combat Communism and only Fascism can 
eliminate Communism* 

"The Eisenhower Fiasco in German v" article is bitterly 
anti-Semitic and criticizes then General DWIGHT D,‘ 
EINSENHOWER 1 s conduct in the occupation of Germany and 
blames him for vhat MADOLE describes the"5nf amous 
war orime trials at Nuerenberg*" 

The .July!., 195>2, issue contains an article entitled 
"Exposing the Jewish War Criminals" by JAMES H» MADOLE 
which is a bitter anti-Semitic article and excuses Nazi 
Germany’s conduct toward Germans of Jewish faith. 

The October, 19^2 issue contains an article entitled "The 
Revolt Against Aryan Civilization", by JAMES H. MADOLE, ■ 

‘and an article entitled "Adolph Hitlers An Appreciation." 
by EUSTACE MULLENS "The Revolt Against Aryan Civilization" 
is an Anti-Semitic article. "Adolph Hitlers An Appreciation" 
is also an anti-Semitic article which is complimentary of 
Adolph Hitler, 

T-l provided a phamplot captioned "DNP" issued in 19f?l- 
by the Deomocratic Nationalist Party of the’ United states 
of North America which organization Trl previously identified 
as being synonymous with the National Renaissance Party. 

This booklet sets out - the aims of the Democratic Nationalist 
Party, which have previously been set forth in this .report 
and lists a 20 point program which program is anti-Non- 
Aryianj anti-alien and .calls for the United States of North 
America, consisting of the United States, Canada, Green- 
land, Iceland, .and the polcar .regions, This program also 
calls for close cooperation with Mexico, Central and 
South America, Instant booklet also sets out the organiza- 
tional structure of the Democratic Nationalist Party vhich 
lists the following elected officers: 

Group Supervisor 
Group Secretary 
Group Treasurer 

and the following appointed. officers: 

Group Leaders 
Group Adjutant ' • r . 

?? 12 « 



BSlO^-l'OOi}. , 


VIII . MISCELLANEOUS ACTIVITIES OP THE NATIONAL. 

RENAISSANCE PARTY 

T-l stated FREDERICK WEISS' was interested in placing 
GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERICK in the Steuben Society of: 

Chicago, Illinois, during 1952. The Informant stated 
WEISS intended using , FNU KURGO or KURGEL (PH), head of 
the 'Steuben Society t.o plac.e VIERICK within that group 
bit was unsuccessful because VIERICK refused to become, 
a member', T-l stated WEISS 1 * purpose in placing VIERICK' 
in this group was to use him to guide the Steuben Socie.ty 
toward the aims and objectives of the N.R.P. 

T-l stated the N'.R.P,, During April, 195>3j was interested 
in getting HANS RUDEL, a German citizen, to come t.o the 
United States to address the N.R.P, T-l stated he believed 
RUDEL was associated, with the Socialist’ Reich Party of 
Germany but could not recall whore he 'had hoard this. 


V 


T-l 


ADMINISTRATIVE DETAILS 

T-l was unable bo recall any specific date for much of 
the information reported by him except that it came to 
his attention during 1952 and 1953* He was likewise 
unable to recall which leaders of instant group imparted 
some of this information to him. Consequently such infor- 
mation was reported as coming to him from leaders of this 
organization during 1952 and 1953* 

By Airtel to the Bureau d^ated ij./lO/53 Boston reported 
Baron WILLIAM FRARY VON BLOMBERG as a member of the N,R.P r 
T-l stated subsequently that he learned BLOMBERG was not 
a member of- the N.R.P. or connected with this group but 
was merely sumpathetic to its aims. Based on this informa- 
tion it is not felt that active investigation 6 f BLOMBERG 
is warranted at this time, 

T-l has advisedhe does not know either HANS AHRENS or HANS 
BORCZINSKI , ' 


LEAD PAGE 

BOSTON DIVISION ' 

At Boston, Massachusetts 

Will review the indices of the Boston Office 
and report available information concerning Baron William 
FRARY VON BLOMBERG, 

-lip- 


L 


♦ ♦ 


bs 105-1004 

ADMINISTRATIVE PAGE 


Activity . 
and/ or < 

Identity De script, 
of Source of Info, 

Date 

Received 

Agent 
to Whom 
Furnished 

Location in ' 
Boston Files 


1952 and 

1953 

April, 1953 

Orally to 
SA PAUL 
M. R0THER- 
MEL 

Instant report 

b6 

b7C 

b7D 



I 


1 


BS105-1004 


REFERENCE ?" 

•New York Air tel to the Bureau dated 5/9/53 and 

Bureau Airtel to New York dated. 4/20/53* captioned "Neo- 

Nazi Movement in the U.S. - I.S.-X." 

New York Airtel to the Bureau dated 4/14/53 captxoned 
"KONRAD ADENAUER, Chancellor, Federal Republics of Germany, 
Reported Plot to Assassinate While *:in the US, IS-X . 

Boston Airtel to the Bureau dated 4A°/53» captioned 
"Alleged Possible Attempt to Assassinate German Chancellor 
KONRAD ADENAUER, IS-X." „ 

Bureau Airtel to New York dated 4/8/53, captioned" KONRAD 
ADENAUER, Chancellor, Federal Republics of Germany, 
Reported Plot to Assassinate While in the U.S* IS-X, 

New York Airtel ■•to the Bureau dated 4/8/53* captioned 
"Alleged Possible Attempt to Assassinate German Chancellor 
KONRAD ADENAUER, IS-X" . - ' 

New York Airtel to the Bureau dated 4/6/53 ‘ captioned 
"CPUSA, International Relations IS-C/' 




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V {By^VlSGINIA GARDNER 
c A' speaker , for, the ; fascist party 
ich is trying to gain a follow- 
j in Yorkvilie urged his .small 
nd f b£ listeners at .a street "corner 
eting , Friday night to obtain 
the names and addresses * of “Jew- 
ish merchants” who exhibited col- 
lection boxes, for, donations to Is- 
rael- and forward them to the FBLj 
The speaker, Keith Thompson, 
sllbiited thatthe merchants were, 
vi|plathig ? the ' Alien Registration 

Asjt.: j r ; ; . ; ; n / - / - 

he meeting; attended b y" more 


than 40 persons,- many of them 
youths, at 87 Street and Second 
Avenue, under auspices of the Na- 
jtional Renaissance Party, was one 
of a series of weekly Friday night 
meetings .held in Yorkvilie recent- 
ly. Another was announced for' 8 
p.m. next 1 Friday night # * r / 

When a defiant witness before 
the House Un- American Commit- 
tee .in Foley Square recently . di- 
rected the attention of . the com- 
mittee jo these meetings and de r 
clared 'that Sen. ^ J oseph McCarthy 
had been/heiled/* at the previbns 


weekend street comer gathering, 
chairman Harold Velde (R-Ill), in- 
dignantly shut off such testimony;! 
Broadvvay.’producer Lee : S. SaBihr 
son was the witness/ ; . ^ " **' >v 

. ' Inquiry disclosed Chat the meet- 
ings! continued, ranging / frdkn 
York/Av^nue^, ta'Secorid Avenue^ 
but ‘ ^lw'aysmear.87 Street;/" ' 
Thompson, who '/said -he hirnself 
iWould:riihTor Congress next-year, 
told, his .audience that /the mer-’ 
chants /who , displayed cqllectioh 
boxes* for" funds Tor ' Lraeif were 
breaking. 



tional fascist^ Gerald L. K. Smith 
style, 'as "Hosenfeld;” % 

COMPANIONS^ „ 

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most brazen Nazi - phrases, havAj 
ever,:Throughout Tn6mpson^|ad^j ‘ 
dress this mah/ who / went' ur ~ ^ ' ' 
ed, dstnbuted d fo^ _ 

fed '^ationab. Renaissance/ Bulle- 
tin” which AVOiind ; up with angaf- 
tide headed-, ''Adolph Hitler: pA 
Appreciation”/ / /// _ ’ A'/ :" L r V 5 
\tr* the 'outset this/ speaker^ a; 
/ (Continued priRage T) / 

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(Continued from PageS) ' 

. fanatical gleam' in -his pale eye$ ; 

* jsaid of the National Renaissance 
Party: "We make no bones .about 
bur party being* a fascist party/ 
I Speaking of Yorkville, he' said 
that* Germans . were numerically 
the largest group. Irish second, 
Hungarians thirds "with the Je>V£ 
running a poor, seventh or eighth.? 
Then he added, his eyes gleaming 
and a lewd grin of hate on his thin 
Sips: / . V // * 

! ‘‘And* these* Jews in ’ Yorkvillej 
j better be mighty good little boysj 
yes, sir, mighty good little boys. I 
- He bragged about how "we 
have been smeared -in the past by 
The New York Post and even by 
Howard Rushmore in the Journal-; 
American/' but he saved hfc chief 
ire for the Post. : , , f, , / j 

"If Oliver Pilat or any of their 
reporters are here/ be said, /they; 
caii go back to their- boss” — anC 
here he pronounced the name 6( 
the editor, James Wechsler, with 

iL. 1 L . r _ .. n'" ... 


the broadest of, anti-Semitic earf| 
jcature, as/Takie .Vechsler” — aha 
concluded, /'and, tell Kim .\veT£ 
going To run; a candidate for Con-' 
gress whether the* Post likes Jt'ol 
not/ : ^ ,1 

He repeated Wechsler s '• namf , 
plsewhere in the sewer-language 
/harangue, and ^boasted thathe himl 
[self; would be 'given publicity" by, 
columnist Barry • Gray, * bee’ause he 
ms one of Grays "pet' bates/ J 
THEIR AIM. / : / ; ; 

"We won’t win the Congres- 
sional seat the first time/ he said. 

' but well get. out a* big enough 
vote in Yorkville so we will be 
-known as a balance of. power! 
Then we can malre both the Horn] 
dcratic and , Republican parties 
pay attention- to out racial ideotj 

bgy/ . „ / / ;/: : 1 

Like -the previotis speaker, he] 
too, tried to foment his band oi 
listeners ' to make trouble -for /the 
Jewish merchants/ and asked theii' 
To look for boxes op blue and white 1 
which, bear the Star ’bf David/L 
In , the, National Renaissance 
Bulletin distributed the previous 
Friday night in the vicinity of 
Tcork and 87 Streep the unasham- 
ed statement appeared:. "The Na-i 
[tiorial Renaissance Party was bid 
ganized in 1949 -to combat both} 
Communism apd parliamentary/ 
democracy. .We beheve/in/the, 

J principles of America First an 
alism cr '" L 


ft TT // 


V/* 


-^r ueciareci<tlie “Red jReySi 
Russia "was fin 
by the ' Jewish banking hoi 1 
Kuhn-Loeb "and V Company!^ jn . 
it’ declared that; " V / World Jev&f 
ry, not* the Gennan military ana! 
political - leaders who were jegaf-j 
ly butchered at die infamous Nur-j 
rehberg^ Trials, were the reaLwak 
criminals/!*/ /. f /. v j 

/In the Bulletin distributed last 
Friday, (dated, October/ 195$j 
and, like the other, published & 
Beacon, N.Y., which' is near Peeks-) 
kill) "the Jew” was blamed for 


/true leadership: 

t It quoted Dr. Alexis Carrel, the 
fascist ideologist; Friedrich Niet- 
zsche; whose, racial creeds were, a 
basis of Hitler ideology, and Pla- 
to. ^ ■' ; 

It slandered the /Puerto Rican 
people a n d the ."Mexican 'wet- 
backs/ / an abusive/ term : used 
used against Mexican nationals otr 
iginating in .the tale that jhan^ 
swam a river to get into tbis.couh- 
try* to avoid immigration authori 
tie& It inveighed against "the per- 
ils inherent in racial mongreliza- 
tion or intercourse between alien 
radial groups./ / . . * ' | 

. As a, handful oF "spectator# 
crowded around * the Congressional 
hopeful/ Thompson/ one ' woman 
signing, "I certainly - admire .your 
courage,” / the-', man 'distributing 
theTeaflets’ Avas asked if the/group 
had ’k headquarters , nearby. /We 
have one, oyer here'' a v ways,” he 
said/ nodding, "toward. -86 ‘-Street, 
But Svould 1 ' not give its :exaef loca- 

' . M^hen the bfgani^tiori attempt? 
fed to" revive 'Yorkville* elenie^fcr ®** 



i 

\ 







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' < 1 3 '• - • 

: 6/22/53 



Nf ' 

' SAG , NEW YOR%t3aif5-6 112 ) < 

NATIONAL RENAISSANCE PARTI; 
IS - X , 


ReNY airtel to Bureau, 5/9/53* 

An Initial inquiry By the New York Office through' 
Tile review and contacting of ‘Informants indicates - that the 
National Renaissance Party is presently active under i-ts 
leader JAMES MADOLE, . ' - - ' - • ' ' • 

MADOLE resides at Beacon, .New York - and ths employed \| 
in New' York City until recently when he v was fired fdr his' ” 
German activities. 


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'< The National Renaissance Party holds street, meetings 
in the- Yorkville Section of New York every Friday night at : 
which approximately 50 to 100 people, attend, MAPOLE is the - • 
principal speaker at these meetings^ and ; his talks are of a * 
•pro-Fascist, anti -Communist, anti--* Jewish or. anti -Seme tic 
nature, • ‘ . ' ’ ■ . ' r . - • 

* o ~ - j - 

Active members Of the National Renaissance 1 Party 
appear ‘to be limited in number and there is dfj indication 
, that ;this organization is. active in .any area Outside of. New 
York. This organization pubj.% she s a "monthly pamphlet; 
called the tt National Renaissance Bulletin* 1 which has been 
subsidized by various individuals.. Copies of this pamphlet 
have been forwarded to the Bureau previously. • , 

The New York Office has opened a case on this - ‘ . 
organization and will; conduct investigation of it and JAMES 
MADOLE and will submit a report in. accordance/ with. Section ’ 
.87D of the Manuel of Instructions*-*^^ 


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Renaissance .party;, were, digcisied .fed-Se^algo ; discussed V 
. certa in $j$ 0 “Ifezi' - g tat ements/; mage by E AROH? 

SrLar?f ‘ aBe ^ n; > s ^ ^^tw™S^e th6 : 

the g^PRP r>iamb6j?;s ttere ‘.not to loin -hh» 

t# :■*>&*<>■ --t>9 ifatw^.faMo faal S^Lllwt 61,8 

! ' If ? w S oF i£~a '%&*?+ not want .‘the namaa 

SecoSI toswn ?a^e P m-. PP ° £? °“ that - l3t 

an t£i&fc lie" , h&s ob s epved THQHFSOTtf 

“f the 'rational RomLatooe 

M^ariU iSde Street, KL0 ’ a )xMrt . the middle ' ’ 

5««t:ing. SfHOlfsOH expressed 

o .-t S n 1 ,^8' Mazi leaders who,had: b©Sn- imorisonod • ; 


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_^v.~ additional ; inf litis*' " ; i 6 ' r * 
l : "tfHo; is' theisbb3e£& of a onrrbntA ?bic 

. - ‘A- - a,, ’« . ’ r*t-t r*f\ r* . a* ,'uTn 


' ' .investigation. * This -information i s. contained; in 05^575.9-5* ‘ / 

\ ; page' 9 k | ^ fin?nis|iga tbe- ^oilovdn^.VaQlsground; infn 3 ?niati 6 n: 


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•V.-r fcC.c, subject.. It is believed bh^t the^ subject?, ndght be'- able to.. f A.v -;^2 
•V A':.~ A ’furnisaiidditibnal information regarding NeQ^Nazi^acti-^ties /; * r° . 

' in. and that aKpdid be de^eio'pol^a- Potential SepurlbyA , b7D ; I 

infdriiaiant*' ; it^ is^Wcornmendpd tbs^t a jzaa§x.TD$ : -apQna&;, op.*' ;r^ v : ,f J 

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| [ wag interviewed at the gY O en 

■unci Marfiad ■hhat-.ge^tma presently residing: ati 

and was e mployed at | 

| fta stated - that &a pad eol 
tfeoufe >.a month Agct ana, nan Been hesidi^ wlth | 

Hat : tlie abdve;ddd3»Qas ? ‘$$&de. 5 theai* , "He'-' s ta t ecL v mat 




%&id^.tMaC t®tV^G$PSOSf ;^^iyiBR®^';h&34,0TOv;: 


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■ d^id/th’dt •haiiev©' thdt‘ ail- the-; infdrmatioh 

i&hti^£l£^^ ohtaihd i£ turned./dVer-v to the -JSSv :'• 

tetfce# .stated .that -. pr ©dent vtfrad !S}H&HP^O^ / ;> ■; . .. 

, ^ ; ^ r great .disd^fteaigi’iiitj' ’ jidblgji' Tilh $!□§.*.’ leader 1 ,d£.t3d& 

i?atiohai'. Benalasanc e ‘radical Meda V : :. - ;; 

; and 'e^ihitlQniaie^^.^'J ’ |that "" " - > , 

!\he -wiehsfi he % were * : pbi::;d£ ;ail.; t&i]s: niit ' that, thdvpe.o pier arowhd. * >. ■ . 


to what . type' ..pi!;; r ; ,-w 

.asn ’* argand^tio»'^ai?‘t^- wh!%; ^VsY*; -. ... ; l r ■; '"p a '-S c -' 


stated. thdt $HGI$P0oir 



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|and; .mat; be y&p'tf ' hmx%xp$w ? -r* ■ ’ ' 

aBoUt i&ontactdn^^lis “FBI* ■ .E^-^Idd, 

lie toEUW j&titf '$QB$ - of?' -ini’ dic^ifffcidxt ijbdeli; , • 


•; "and^- -tfe.S/ .a£ dfc t&stL 


fc due tof 


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6^<^jr-,^Qurd‘ 

contact" t-?lW- Mm . bttt.it&at , k&g -" • 



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/■„, ..." " r j was- Interviewed ph 6/2.6/5.3>. ^d'‘£ , ul^slieid. . ' /Ayr.^c 

., the ^following information:.’ ’;• Ay/ ; ; //"./ 

A" Ay /. y : -. He ' stated that;. EIETH;$HOMPSON bad; ceased - to/ attend, the/:. , /- y/A • / 
A... >/ v-l mektings, ,o’f ; the National -.Renais s’$nce/ t Ran^ :ai£vAo^ „; r , : r/ V AA 

'!nffree'-'with^*Ahe v -'inanner.-''in ? 'whl'cii .'M^b^E/'Wan^cbh^ctdSiit-'theise.;':- : 'V/y A/ . 


ASA/ of ■ MADOLE' s radical - ideas and/exhibi tisja^/ :THOMPSO^- V /;/ ; (/ / f- ‘y/y 

/vyA-/. lids recently: 'lost 3-0x0$ v -lM*©tijg^ •. -.driiong‘::hi a . ; ir ieiids be’catise- -rj, , : J 

-V;y ’ o v f'-:.avrehent indidetiV. 'i<hlW .known : td’' them.- ."This/y/; /. ; / 

’ 1 'A aa ^ A y j, -a, • J *i — Aj 1 £*-«•' ' mtr'A'R/rrjct.A’Kr i/v/Viowni ' J 




‘ " ; ’ : ">;.v ;/':_ . 'The . informant 
’ y4ncd‘derittat‘^'a4it-^rd;' 

*a^d:/thdr v e'';vo^ 

.■•/’ ^ / 1 ’- t.of .t.h;.e ^'holiday. XNef\sdid?/bh^ for .thev;p^a 

' ’ r- ' nf -rrmN -hVi a" Vinn.- KoAri . Q t +•'« -ft r? >•? ncr flrfis flfiA: -ifl’S' ’ 


-bf youths f had-tbeen ; at^eHding dres eedf/a'e'‘ 'st'orm" tnobpbt*.s:' ,jand‘/f/>'.,v 
-I*. '•• \ a rahfinrfid ' to ’ : nnrt er thk* leader shipCof%o^ 

■ ' '' .-. 1 I HQ stated + _ :Virit ■! +■■ "i pi "pVirn rvr>fi d t - , Hfl +■. ' - 


... 


staged, : tiiak: ; dlt ; V; T?\^p‘iSed*' 



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. /V J ; The blrif omarik/S^tated/ thaty, JAlffiS- ^ 
:i ; Calif Qi^nia' ‘last^^'Qkand^ and ^ ;witli PRSpERieK::^^^^ ’ 



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v’v^’-" - '' stated at; aeyenai . -&£ i t,k#/>|TatIdriiki Reh’aissahcb idcetiiigs 'tha,t ;. .’*‘,V 
?;•: X \ ;•” . .HiEC?£®S3fe ; pf Jbopia S'/bJ^ His .aHt2.Pi.e_s on,. ; -. : . • '•;- 

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aij3,TasJiM^a. actions, uo .naej • >-%../, .• •••,„ 

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’ '♦rifcwi 'f£*ag- far ifiwfti- 2® l&A lloaSsi^ .%‘SM 

s&«a.;4u^tc^»' wjhN* 1$®' V&&&B * •’ • -'v.;;' •?; ;*, •' -,...' 

lfeiblb'8*^d tMi.ft dalegap?* 

*5* Mitg AO '4*M-wft'*> H****** ;^, B ? fSmLm* *? H 

and Silases lit ‘the BcoQtarhobd of lias* ia Ito* id«oioisl^:_Couatfcr^,3M 

it -Mat he sa©i>t Stay with Caoxunissu 1 "There is-3i<? Tpost. Sat hr istiwM H 

• SdlS„^t^7 i**.** go, olong WA'lM-MgMl 

oassoftri fe«.: lisoiw. io:th» only- wy: 

: Sandies.* The reat at hiA .speech-KCS a Aors or £$®a ^sred 


■'-Jb.e .&sa4^"caEiA o^eft 

:' nffet ^ &La- p«i»i ^#ea«AW^ • "•• ; - ' 4 *v ; -' ’.>> ) "^Sfj 

P*»rt Kutt* '«aa i»tpt»Sai?ed'Aa fcfc&n® 

COntroHirg o^wer of aU aii ovar, tha aorl^- aiia .aa. Jg$*dM j 

. ai.|ha-BtaSeC-Stata^.. -He* tbOjj.repjeated 

■• , ^ ^ : -4^am ^ -the., ^ Sailed w» pasae4;;^M?Ab^t' f 
.1^1581^ £0B^a3^^ ; src«iBtd. ^6s^»g:,iawia^' 
fe-- Jiar^eiaa^ a,i»«aUoB.^ Maliiaa raised- 

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W^iibft J.-. --''iSai ’•scanjaroah^affiBcfe- iritft tha ioarig 00s8saJt^a^g agpia^^j^r^v!-: 

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J4‘^| s « t.Ee.'to 'eoaav Mr '&e;09*t tw^fiaarff-ttaea- 4a ^Df^a»befefi|b 


1 - till- O A Hrfe*4 P ' -r T a'# rttv*' 1 ' ^ 

• Jut oU \J>3. tfe 2ogi^l>-aan4idate^ atia ap^arestljr hsa.-fij® tierra pl«a & pgfy^,)&?ap. 

, FBI - NEW- VOj^J '"T”* ^rm. is BE6SX0B.? MEBSIG*- - - : . ; . .; ■'- ‘- A y:-; ? .[ 


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SUBJECT: ,- jig 


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f > y y ' teiished 1 ' attache! ’notebcon ;^15^53 < coti^erning^ tl 

yy ( *'*'*'* y. < yy/ r \ f *i'*v . * ' * _ a- / ' ’ , '■”> - * *'* , * r< *r'*-i ' ty*" 

fiiyme;e 1 >ing^\of'rtlie',a^^^ i‘ y •?' -V 





J0I2 31 


' Jin. fact oa a £eg~ pactions*, ag j^l^og;/ 

backed no CON^E.McGIHLEI to the" time Of thousands: of- dollars*.;! ^ 

“ “*T. certainly* Mctenley not:-; / £V§ 

offer the heae of the ; ,man repredCfttiSg'ibis $$ 

circumstances.^ 'But if ^^tac^edill^ixiejrvto. that; ,bxtent 
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(1-KM^? B C TJr R ± T if 1, P URMATION- 

FEDERAtrfeu REAU OF I 


it irz. a 


FORM NO. 1 

THIS CASE ORIGINATED AT 


REPORT MADE AT 


1 mj YORK 



AMERICAS COMMITTEE FOR THE 
ADVANCEMENT OP WESTERN CULTURE 


CHARACTER OF CASE 


INTERNAL SECURITY - X 


SYNOPSIS OF FACTS: 


T~1 advised that H. KEITH THOMPSON, JR. was organizing the Ameri- 
can Committee for the Advancement of Western Culture in Fteb., 
1953, with the aid of FREDERICK C. F. WEISS. ACAWC was ex- 
pected to be a National organization, with a Midwest and a 
West Coast Director, working under THOMPSON, the National. Chair- 
man. A .list of officers of the ACAWC, as furnished by T-l, set 
out with background information. T-l advised -that THOMPSON said 
ACAWC was formed to serve as an advisory group to the American 
people, and as a political action group on questions pertaining 
to U. S. public and foreign affairs, international relations 
and policies* T-l said THOMPSON spoke at the Yorkville street 
meeting of the National Renaissance Party on 2/26/53* T-o 
stated THOMPSON presently employed as Office Manager of his 
father's firm. Cooper's Forms, 7 Dutch St., NYC, and- further 
stated that THOMPSON wants to get out of the ACAWC and the NRP-, 
but believes that he is too much involved with MADOIE, WEISS, 
and FGECKENSTEIN to drop out now. T-l stated in April, 1953, 
that THOMPSON is planning on being placed on the ballot for U. S. 
Congress from the Yorkville section of NYC, to be sponsored bv 
the NRP . 




APPROVED AND 
FORWARDED: 


SPECIAL. AGENT 
IN CHARGE 




DO NOT WRITE IN THESE SPACES 


^ //' 


COPIES OF THIS REPORT 


9 - Bureau (RM) 

(jjqpies Continued Next Page) 

(7 h New York (105-6071) 

(1 - NY 105-6127) 

(1 - ,«Y 105-6128) , . 


PROPERTY OF FBI — This conJteten&aJ report and its contents are loaned are not to be 

distributed outside of agency to which 

SECURITY INFOS* s *M ve A mek T h,n 5 hg m 1 t * I -L 








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Copies Continued: 

3 - Newark (105-1163) (RM)' 

1 - Boston (lQ5elQ05)Cinfo.)(RM) 

2 - Chicago (105-138I|.) (RM) 

2 - Los Angeles (RM) , 

(dp- NY 105-6112 ) rv 
(l - NY 105-7069) 

(1 - NY 100-111893) 


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A. ORIGIN and SCOPE .... 

B. OFFICERS OF THE ACAWC 



1. HARO ED KEITH THOMPSON, JR 

2 . EDWARD A . FLECKENSTEIN 

3. FREDERICK CHARLES FERDINAND WEISS ... 
k. ^EUSTACE CLARENCE MU LLINS' ., 

5r 



9. GUY C. STEPHENS . . , 

10. 1 I ... 

11. PETER L. XAVIER 

12. 1 


r ::::::::: 


* $ <* • • 


C . STATED AIMS AND OBJECT IVES OF ' THE ACAWC ....... i ...... 

D. ACTIONS TAKEN TO IMPLEMENT PROGRAMS OF' THE ACAWC 

E. IDENTIFYING DATA ON INDIVIDUALS ASSOCIATED WITH 

ACAWC OFFICERS . . . . 


1. RUDOLPH SCHIEMER ............. 

2.. LAWRENCE DENNIS ..... . . . . . ... ...... 

. kurt mertig 

^ • JAMES A. 3jfoA=/DflTjT*i - * r • «•%.**• •«•%*% 

♦ I I •**««%%%« «* *.«..% r«« * ».« » « • • • * * ^ 

6 . GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERECK ..A .. ...... ... .... „ , . 


I 


7. Baron WILLIAM FRARY VON .BLOOMBERG 

Q> J I .. ............ 

9 HANS ULRICH RUDEL 

10 . 


11. BENJAMIN H. FREEdplat 

12. A. 0. TITTMAN ....... 


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ny 105-6071 

DETAILS? 


. . Confidential Informant T-l, of known reliability, who 

is m a position to furnish reliable information concerning 
neo-Nazi activities, furnished the following -information 
concerning the American Committee for the ’Advancement of 
Western Culture, It is noted that hereinafter, the American 
oommittee for the Advancement of Western Culture will be re- 
ferred to as the ACAWC. 

stated that H. KEITH THOMPSON, JR„, Apartment 13, 
^ou Main Street, Chatham, New Jersey, was very anxious to 
organize the ACAWC in February of 1953, and that FREDERICK 
C. F. WEISS was helping THOMPSON in this endeavor,. T-l ad- 
vised^that THOMPSON was considering the following well-known 
individuals to sponsor- the ACAWC s 

Dr. BEATTY, author of "The Iron Curtain Over America". 

Professor CHARLES TANSILL, author of "The Back Door 

To War " . 

State Senator JACK TENNEY of California, 

General VAN HORN MOSELEY of England. 

* V ' 

Rear Admiral RICHARD E. BYRD, 

* ' > J ' 

BENJAMIN FREEDMAN > a sex deviate# 

.„. un T-l said that THOMPSON wants- FREEDMAN -to finance the 
AOAWO, and to be a contact man with the Arabs, for the organi- 
zatlon* 



. on April 29, 19 53i advised that H. KEITH THOMPSON 

made the . statement that the ACAWC will be a National organi- 
zation with a Midwest Director and a West Coast Director* 

• ' wi'fcb the National Organization Headquarters 
in the East Coast area, to obtain political action on ques- 
tions pertaining to United States public and foreign affairs, 
and international relations and policies. 


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On April 29# 1953# T-l furnished copies of a letter 
written by H. KEITH .THOMPSON* JE. to KURT MERTIG, 317 East 
5i)-th Street# New York 22, New York, which, in part, is set 
out belows 


"On behalf of the Executive Board of the ACAWC, I 
have been asked to extend you the hearty invitation to join 
our committee in any of the following capacities (1) Execu- 
tive Staff (2) Advisory Staff (3) Sponsor. The enclosed 
Organizational Statement of the Committee shows in detail 
our aims and programs. The final date for completion of 
the committee organizations must be no later than April 10,” 

The section of the above quoted letter concerning the 
organizational setup of the ACAWC, is set out below: 

’’There shall be a National Chairman and one or more 
National Vice-Chairmen. Under the direction of the Na- 
tional Chairman will function an Administrative and Advisory 
Staff. The Administrative Staff shall consist of the Execu- 
tive Secretary: General Council! Cbrical Staff! Treasurer! 
and Heads of Divisions. The Advisory Staff shall consist 
of groups of experts in varied fields of endeavor, who are 
qualified to advise and make recommendations to the committee 
concerning matters pertaining to their specialized fields. 
There shall be an East- Coast Director, a West Coast Director, - 
and^ a Midwestern Director. These regional Directors, with 
their own staffs, shall be governed in matters of general 
policy by the National Committee, and shall coordinate their 
activities with those of tlae National Committee, However, 
the regional groups shall be free to take posit'ions on mat- 
ters peculiar to their own regions, - independent of' the Na- 
tional Committee, The primary function of the Regional Staffs 
will be to serve as a distribution system for the National 
Organization, and as an information and advisory center for 
the area 'concerned. 

’’ TENTATIVE PERSONNEL ? Mr. KEITH THOMPSON of 38 0 Main 
Street, Chatham, New Jersey, will serve as National Chair- 
man, -Mr. THOMPSON is a New York businessman who served last 


m* 3 ** 



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NY 105-6071 , 




"year as Public Relations Counsel for the rightist anti- 
communist Socialist Reich Party of West Germany, and who 
headed the Committee for International Justice and the Com- 
mittee for the Freedom of Major General Remer. The General 
Counsel is EDWARD A. FLECKEN STEIN , Weehawken, New Jersey, 
an attorney, member of the Bar of New York and New Jersey, 
and President of the Voters Alliance for Americans of German 
Ancestry* His work in behalf of the Presidential campaign 
of Senator ROBERT A. TAFT, is well known. The appointment 
of other National Vice-Chairmen is pending. Mr. FREDERICK 
CHARLES F. WEISS of Middletown, New York, and owner of Le 
Blanc Publishers, will serve as Executive Secretary. Mr. 
WEISS is the prominent German-American author of such works 
as r Quo Vadis America*"' and ^Germania Delenda Est*. Mr* 
EUSTACE CLARENCE MULLINS, financial writer and author of 
•Mullins On The Federal Reserve * .■ will serve n.q Trp.Fi.<mr>P!r> 
and Financial Advisor. I I 


1 . 1 will ser ve as I 

I will serve asT 

L IM , 

I J will serve as 

Other Rogional Directorships are pending, 


who is 


and I 
of the I 


"Mr.. GUY C. STEPHENS, Editor of ‘The Individualist*, 
will serve as Editorial A dvisor. Members of the large Ad- 
visory Staff will inclu de I I peter t.. 

.XAVIER; I I andl 


Head the | ^ | uoner appointments are in pnnr,A.gg 

of confirmation, and will be announced when the roster is 
completed. The final National Staff will consist of 50 per- 
sons', the Regional Staffs will have 20 person's each, and the 
general membership will be unlimited." 

On April 29, 1953# T~1 furnished the following list 
of tentative officers and personnel of the ACAWCj 


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NY 105-6071 

H. KEITH THOMPSON, JR,, National Chairman 
EDWARD FLECKENSTEIN, Counsellor 
FREDERICK C, F, WEISS, Executive Secretary 
EUSTACE CLARENCE MJLLINS, Treasurer and Financial 



Identification and Background of Officers of the ACAWCt 

1. HAROLD KEITH THOMPSON, JR. 

Apartment 13, 380 Main Street 
Chatham, New Jersey 


Confidential Informant T-2, of known reliability, 
advised that HAROLD KEITH THOMPSON, who resides with his parent S' 
Mr. and Mrs. HAROLD KEITH THOMPSON, Apartment ‘13, 38O Main 
Street, Chatham, New Jersey, was the Executive Secretary of 
the Committee for Freedom for Major General Remer and the 
Committee for International Justice; T-2 further advised that 



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Ref erral/ Consult 


" uonridentlal Inlbrmant- Tr. 4 , of known reliability, ad- 

vised that the Progressive Party in the State of New Jersey 
was controlled by the Communist Party of l^Tew Joroey, T-ij. 
also stated that the- majority of the Progressive Party func- 
tionaries in New Jersey were members of the Communist Party, 
and that one of the major jobs of the Communist Party was to 
build up the Progressive Party, 

It is noted that the Communist Party has been citpd 
by the Attorney General of the United States as coming within 
the purview of Executive Order 9835* 

Confidential Informant T-l, on April 17 , 1953 , furnished 
a copy of literature distributed by the American Voters Union, 
216 East- 86 th Street, Now York City, which was used prior to 
the Republican Convention in July of 1952, to persuade people 






a 




NY 105-6071 

to campaign for ROBERT 'TAFT instead of for EISENHOWER; The 
literature listed H. KEITH THOMPSON, President, and RALPH 
CARRANO, Publicity Director, of the American Voters Union* 
T-l stated that the American Voters Union was set up only 
for the 1952 primary in p re -convention campaigns.. 



The New York Office has no pertinent information 
concerning the American Voters Union or RALPH CARRANO.. 

On November 21, 1952, EDWARD A. FLECK EN STEIN * Presi- 
dent of the Voters Alliance of Americans of German 'Ancestry, 
was interviewed at his residence, 39 King Avenue, Weehawken, ■ 
Now Jersey, by SA BRYAN F. JINNET, JR., of the New Y or k Office. 

FLECKENSTEIN advised that THOMPSON had cancelled his 
registration with the' Department of State as a Foreign Agent 
for the Socialist Reich Party of Germany, and. that the Com- 
mittee for' Freedom for Major General Remer is' no, longer in 
existence, and that the Committee ' for -International Justice 
is in an inactive status* 


The March 22, 1953 issue of the "Newark Star Ledger", 
a daily newspaper of Newark, New Jersey, reflected an inter- 
view by reporter RICHARD 0* SHAFER, with H. 'KEITH THOMPSON, 
in a column entitled, "Anglo-Saxon Culture Boosted by Jerseyan". 

* The article reflected tho following: 


Here is how Thompson described the aims of his new 
born committee, the American Committee for the Advancement 
of Western Culture, of which he is National Chairman. This 
committee will b© strictly an American group with representation 
m the various major cities, dedicated to a vigorous fight in 
behalf of the traditional Nordic Anglo-Saxon American culture, 
and against the, encroachment of Communism and alien Cultures * 

• ma -t:es no bones about world Zionism being the com- 

mit ueo f s major target." 


Confidential Informant T-l stated on December 5. 1952, 
that FLECKENSTEIN , THOMPSON,, and a man named | | of the " 


, were homosexuals, and that din-ino- 
Ults bums* ar mu, they often wont to PLECKENSTEINts Suitor 
home m Connecticut, for weekend parties* . He stated that thi 


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NY 105-6071 




was common knowledge among the people of German descent in 
Yorkville, and as a result, these men and their organizations 
were not held in high regard by the German people of the 
Yorkville section of Hew York City* 

2. EDWARD A . FLECKENSTEIN 
39 King Avenue 
Woehawken, How Jorsoy 

On May 7, 1952, SA ANDREW R. BAB YAK of the Newark 
Office, interviewed EDWARD A . FLECKENSTEIN, at which .time, 
FLECKENSTEIN furnished the following information concerning 
himself* 


PLECKENSTEIN said that he was born in- Weohawken, Now 
Jersey, that he is a Counsellor of Law, having obtained his 
Bachelor of Science and his Bachelor of Laws Degrees at Fbrd- 
ham. University, Now York* He stated that his fa.th.cr was born 
in the United States, and that his grandfather was born in 
.Germany, He stated that his father operates a moat provision 
business in Jersey City, New Jersey, which his grandfather 
started, although ho, EDWARD A. PLECKENSTEIN, is eomplotoly 
disassociated with the . operation of the business.. He said 
that he has no .close relatives in Germany, but nevertheless, 
he is very interested in tho German culture and the well-being 
of the German people, and that his family still maintains a 
Summer home in Aschaff enburg, Bavaria, Germany, 

' FLECKENSTEIN stated that he is President of the Vo- 
ters Alliance for Americans of German Ancestry, and said that 
this organization is not directod or influenced in any way 
by a foreign individual, political party or group, but that 
tho organization worked closely with other German -American 
organizations in the United States, 

On November 21, .1952, PLECKENSTEIN Ttfas re-intorviewed 
at his homo, by SA BRYAN F, JINNET, JR., of tho Newark Of- 
fice, at which time, PLECKErTSTEIN stated that he intended in 
the near future, to organize a, now "Youth Group" as apart of 
tho Voters Alliance for Americans of German Ancestry, tvhich 
will be organized under tho leadership of THOMPSON. 

1 . 



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I 






n T “l> on April 29, 1953, advised that FREEDMA.N is the 
political advisor and counsel Tor the ACAWC . T-l further ad- 

mwAT 0 roo^? T a i REDMAN is a sex deviate, and associates with 
THOMPSON for this reason. 


3* FREDERICK CHARLES FERDINAND WEISS 
156 Grand Street 
White Plains, New York 
and 

Weiss Farm 
Mount Hope 

Middletown, New York 


WEISS was interviewed on December 2, 19 Il 7 . bv Si 
E ’™ RNEY > £ r ‘ concerning another matter, at which time 
WEISS furnished the following background information. 


JAMES 


• WEISS stated that he was born July 31, 1885, at 
Pforzheim, Germany * He entered the United States in July of 

in 1931, for four months', and then 
roenterod the United States; in August of 19^2, he was interned 
io_ a period of time by the Immigration and Naturalization 
as an immigration internee. His present wife is 

fiSJl WEISS > a «itl*en of the United States/ 

WEloS presently resides at 156 Grand Avenue, White Plains, 

SL? 0 ?* 331 d 0W 5 S an ‘ d °P GPates th C Weiss Farm,’ Mount Hone, 
Middletown, New York*. . " * 


nf r* m 1 " 1 S dv P cd in A P ril 1953, that WEISS is tho owner • 
? f PuD l lshers * Box 155? 208 East 86th Street, New 

pad that . through this business, he writes and dis- 
tribut os anti-Semitic, pro-Gorman- literature • T^l further 
advised that WEISS is the guiding influence behind aU of 
the pre-Gorman, n e°-Nazi organizations in the United States, 

than°th^ of ? ?? ° f p Ce P any 0f the ^Sanitations,, other 

than that of Executive Secretary of the ACAWC* 

. ,, . . P.PP 1 1953, T-l advised that his informant 
told him that WEISS had stated that he, WEISS, had paid for 

^P f f° efcin S hal1 used for JB-o National Renaissance Party (NRP) 
P°P ng ° n PP Uary 21 * 19^3,- and also paid for the NRP lit- 
t era cure and the publication of tho NRP M Bulle tin jr * T-l stated 
that inasmuch as WEISS is an alien,, he is afraid of being de~- 


- 9 




ported if he appears to be active in the Fascist-Nazi move- 
ments, so WEISS has stayed in the background and controls 
leaders of the various neo-Nazi organizations. 


4* EUSTACE CLARENCE MULLINS 

60 East Fourth Street, Apartment 19 
New York City 

T-l advised on April 29, 1953, that EUSTACE CLARENCE 
MULLINS is to be the Treasurer and Financial Advisor of the 
AC..WC, and MULLINS is the author of the book entitled, ’’Mullins 
on the Federal Reserve”. 

Confidential Informant T-5, of known reliability, 
advised on June 18, 1953, that EUSTACE CLARENCE MULLINS is 
a frequent contributor of anti-Semitic articles which are 
published in the NRP ’’Bulletin” and ’’The Broom”. It is 
noted that ’’The Broom” is no longer published, "but used to 
bo a pro-German, anti-Semitic pamphlet sold in the German 
section -of New York City. T-5 stated that MULLINS was born 
in Roanoke, Virginia, on March 9, 1923, that he was discharged 
from a minor position as a photographer’s aide with the Li- 
brary of Congress, for admitted authorship of racist articles. 


5. 


Confidential Informant T-6. of unknown reliability, 
a dvisod that | I is a member of the NRP. ^nd 




wno resides at [ 


There is no other identifiable per 
contained in the New York files concerning 


binent informat 1’on 



.Confidential Informant T-7, of known reliability. ad- 

_ t.t 1 n /-i i l I . _ I " J I 


^ w jl. j 5 w -l. rxi-cw wj.. 

vised on March 4 * 1953, that | 

t X ^ Jl — L CUJ lllO.V « U U— 

[is the 

| of the AC AWC • T-7 described 

as follows: 


Ho was bornl 


1_| attended high school in 


in 

[believed to have| 



A 


I $1^11 


^ ; : I No ‘additional pertlno 

is contained in the New York files concerning 



■ Gonf i flonti nl Informant T-7 advised ne Map eh !{., 1953? 

PM is the | of the 

^GiiV/O , ana ane informa nt furni shed the following bac kgr o on & 
Information concerning 


1 [±s about Jyoars old» He lived in 

mrior to mov | and also lived 

7 s1 l I with L_ I T-7 advised that 

I — - — - . Inas associated with t he| 

and^ advocates white supromacy; that | | was anti-Semitic. 

anti-Negro, and anti-Comrmm.i at, and that he is now inactive 
m the 


Confiden tial Informant T-l advised that 
of the ACAWC. 


is the 



Confidential Inform ant T-7 advised on April 17. iQ cft. 

that | | of the | ' “ 

would deliver the Ku Kl ux Klan organi y.s-h-i an 

to the ACAWC,- T-7 advised that is about I -0 I 

years old, ^ 1 1 1 

9* GUY C. STEPHENS 

« 

Confidential Informant T-l advised on April 29, 1993. 
that GUY C. STEPHENS has been listed as the Editorial Ad- 
visor of the ACAV/C « Tho Now York Office has no further per- 
tinent information concerning STEPHENS. 


fr i al Informa nt T-l advised on April 29, 1953, 
I is listed on the Advisory Staff 
le New xork Office has no file information 




iP'iUllui 


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MY 105-6071 



"according to the precepts of the protocols of Zion* It is 
my hope that before I am killed in the Kosher ritual manner, 
I may be able to inform some of my comrades of the real 
reasons behind their being shipped out in cattle boats to 
the Jew Communist planned ‘massacre of white American youth# 
Kindly inform me when I am to be killed for Red Annie 
Rosenberg and her kind*" 


It is noted thatf 


in New Yor.k City* 


presides with 


has attended 
k City, re- 


T-l advised on Juno 26 ^ 1953* that 

street meetings in the German section of New Yor! 
cently, wearing storm trooper ' s boots, and holding a German 
flag while the speaker was addressing the people on the 
street corner* 


C. STATED AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OF THE ACAVJC 


Confidential Informant T-l .furnished a copy of a let- 
ter sent by H. KEITH THOMPSON to KURT MERTIG, 'in which THOMPSON 
specifically listed the aims and objectives of the ACAWC, as 
sot out, in part, below* 

11 A IMS AND OBJECTIVES: In view of the alarming inroads 

made upon our traditional Nordic Anglo-Saxon culture by 
Communism and other internationalist alien cultures, this 
committee has been formed to serve as (1) an advisory group 
to the American' people (2) a political action group on ques- 
tions pertaining to United States public and foreign affairs, 
international relations and policies, 

" PROCEDURE ; By the assembling within .this committee 
of qualified expert personnel in the fields of business, law, 
finance, education, science, fine arts, government, press, 
and diplomacy, this committee will be enabled to present to 
the American people a sound objective analysis of current trends 
and events, together with suitable recommendations* Further, 
this committee will be able to take appropriate measures to 
secure the revision or enactment of legislation or policies 
designed to serve the best interest of the American people 
and their traditional culture* 

"This committee will call upon expert personnel 
throughout the world for information and suggestions which 




f 


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ny 105*6071 

f, will enable this committee and the American people, through 
this committee, to obtain a more accurate picture of the 
true state of domestic and world affairs than that picture 
presently obtainable from United States press and government 
sources.” 

D. ACTIONS TAKEN TO IMP LEMENT PROGRAMS OP THE ACAWC 



Confidential Informant T-l advised that a conference 
was hold on April 18 and 19* 1953* at the farm which is owned 
by FREDERICK C.. P. WEISS, Middletown, New Yo rk, which confer- 
ence was attended by WEISS, EUSTACE MULLINS, I I 

JAMES MEDOLS, H. KEITH THOMPSON, JR., and EDWARD ELE C KEN STEIN. 
At the time of this conferonco, the following discussions 
occurred. 


It was decided to use MEDOLE’s mailing list of the 
NRP for the ACAWC. The ACAWC liras to be formed as. a camouflage 
for a Fascist-Nazi organization, to keep the FBI off of their 
heads. WEISS is rop'orted to have said that the USSR would 
look favorably on Nazism for Europe, in view of the USSR's 
anti-Semitic policy. An Arab in New York City, was said to 
be cooperative with the ACAWC. T-l stated that WEISS -is the 
sparkplug behind THOMPSON in the ACAWC movement, and furnished 
a copy of a letter from PETER L. XAVIER, author and lecturer, 
Dayton, Ohio, which letter was dated March 3* 1953* and ad- 
dressed to FREDERICK C. P. WEISS, which, in part, is set out 
below: 

,r The other day I received a letter from H. KEITH 
THOMPSON of Chatham, New Jersey, formerly Foreign Agent of 
the Socialist Reich Party of Germany. He says that you, 
he, and others have agreed to request me- to serve in some 
capacity on your new society for promotion of Western culture^ 

I accepted, and wish to thank you for your courtesy. n 

T-l advised on March 6, 1953* that the Committee for 
the Freedom of Major Genera.1 Remer and the Committee for In- 
ternational Justice, which THOMPSON ha.s been operating for 
the past six months, are definitely defunct. T-l stated that 
THOMPSON, however, is continuing his work among the German 
people on behalf of the German war criminals, and will continue 



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to do so under this organization. This informant started that 
THOMPSON was presently attempting to organize the ACAWC. 

The informant further advised that THOMPSON spoke at a meeting 
of the NRP , which meeting was held on February 26, 1953* in 
Yorkville, New York* T-l described the NRP as an anti-Semitic, 
pro -German group, the leader of which was JAMES MADOLE* It 
was at this mooting that THOMPSON related his story concerning 
his being an Agent for the Socialist Reich Party and the sub- 
sequent attacks on him by the press and the American Jewish 
Committee. He stated that he believed that HITLER was an 
excellent man, and proceeded to. outline the plan for his 
new group, the ACAWC. 


Queens 

Office on 


College, Queens, NSW Y6hk, advised the New York 
February ^6, 1953 * that it had recently come to her attention 
that anti-Semitic and pro-German activities were being con- 
ducted on the campus of Queens College. She stated that the 
ringleader of these activities was DONALD A, SWAN* who was 
conducting meetings at which the Nazi flag was dis played , and 
who had made several assaults on Jewish 




was 

students.' 

]said that she had learned that DONALD SWAN was being 

influenced and provided with materials for this German ac- 
tivity* by THOMPSON,. 


Confidential Informant T-l advised that THOMPSON and 
GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERECK were very close friends, and T-l 
believed that THOMPSON got many of his ideas and guidance 
from VIERECK. He said that THOMPSON and other persons of 
homosexual tendencies, had visited VIERECK * s apartment* and 
he described VIERECK as a senile old man, who enjoyed watching 
those younger men engage in homosexual activities.' T-l said 
that THOMPSON and FLECKENSTEiN went to the Republican Conven- 
tion in Chicago, Illinois, and went in the company of ARTHUR 
KOEGEL of the Steuben Society. 

Confidential Informant T-ll, of unknown reliability, 
advised on December 1952, that he had spoken to THOMPSON 
several times recently. Ho said that THOMPSON had advisod 
him that he was going to quit his position at E. M. Latson 
and Company, and that he was going to work for his father at 
Cooper's Forms, Incorporated, 7 Dutch Street, New York City; 




SY 105-6071 


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* 




Confidential Informant T-6 stated on June 19, 1953? 
'that THOMPSON is working as' Office Manager' for his father 1 s 
company, and is living part-time at ij .33 East 82nd Street, 

New York City, where he has rented an apartment, and, fur- 
ther, that THOMPSON also lives part of the time with his 
parents in Chatham, New Jersey* T-6 asserted that THOMPSON 
was in disagreement with MAJDOLE because of MADOLE’s ideas 
and methods, and that THOMPSON was turning his activities 
toward tho ’’Pacts .Pbrum”, where he has ma de speeches on sev- 
eral occasions. T-6 stated that THOMPSON I 
he, THOMPSON, wants to get out of the ACAWC and the NRP, ‘ 
but believes that he is too much involved with MADOLE, WEISS, 
and FLECKENSTEIN to drop out now* T-6 advised, further, 
that THOMPSON no longer has any connection with tho Socialist 
Reich Party of Germany, and is no longer a registered Agent 
of a Foreign Principal* 


T-6 advised that f 


of[ 


of the ACAWC,. was expected 
■go come - co wow iork on Juno £U, 1953s for a mooting with 
FREDERICK C. F. WEISS. 


Confidential Informant T-12, of unknown reliability, 
advisod on May 6, 1953? that THOMPSON has been in contact with 
’ DONALD ARTHUR SWAN,' the loader of a small group of pro-Nazi 
boys of college age, in Now York City, and that H. KEITH 
THOMPSON, JR. has furnished SWAN with information concerning 
tho NRP. It is noted that SWAN was dismissed from Queens 
College, New York City, rccontly, because of his attempts to 
organizo a neo-Nazi group there,' and because of anti-Semitic 
statements which SWAN has made on tho campus* T-12 stated 
that SWAN said that ho had been asked by THOMPSON to hold 
Youth Grow meetings, and that SWAN should keep records re- 
flecting complete personal backgrounds of the Youth Groi^p mem- 
bers, stating that this should be done on the stylo of - 
’’Staats Dienst”, a Division of the Gestapo. T-12 said that 
THOMPSON told SWAN that Youth Group members wore not to join 
the NRP or any other organization because the Youth Group mem- 
bers were to bo the future National Socialist leaders in tho 
United States, and that THOMPSON did not want tho names of 
SWAN’S Youth Group membors to appear on any list that would 
make them cognizant to the FBI* 


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Confidential Informant T-12 advised that THOMPSON 
spoke at one of the meetings of the NKP , held in a hall on' 
East 86th Street, New York City, about the middle of April, 
1953* and that at this meeting, THOMPSON expressed sympathy 
for the Nazi leaders who had been imprisoned after the last 
war as war criminals, and that THOMPSON also expressed anti- 
Semitic views# 

Confidential Informant T-l advised in April of 1953* 
that THOMPSON is planning- to bo placed on the ballot for 
United States Congress from the Yorkville section of New 
York City, being sponsored by the NRP. 

The New York u Daily Mirror ,r , a Now York City news- 
paper, had the following statement in the issue of Saturday, 
May 30, 1953, in EDWARD ZELTNER » s column, entitled, "Zeltncr's 
5-Boro News Roundup n ; 

"H. Koith Thompson, the rabble-rouser who was a former 
registered Agent for the neo-Nazi Socialist Reich's Party in 
the United States (ho?s a Jerseyite) tolls intimates that' 
ho will run for Congress." 

Confidential Informant T-13, of known reliability, 
who is in a position to observe the mail received by H. KEITH 
THOMPSON, JR. at his place of employment, 7 Dutch Street, New 
York City, furnished the following list of firms who have- 
communicated with THOMPSON on the dates set out below: 

Date Sondor Address of Sender 

May 25 and Maplewood Bank and 

27* 1953 y Trust Coup any 

June 2,1+, 8, 

11 , 15 , 17 > 22 , 
and 21+ , 1953 


75 Maiden Lane, . 
New York City 


Box 155, 20 8 East 86th 
Street, New York City 


May 26, 1953? Chase National Bank 
June 1,10, and. 

15, 1953 

Juno 15, 1953 Le Blanc Publishers 



Box 128, Maplewood, 
New Jersey 


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Date 


May 28, 1953; 
June 26, 1953 

June 1, 2, 

12, 16 , Mid 

2k, 1953 
June 5, 1953 


July 1, 1953 


It is noted that THOMPSON was employed by the E. M. 
Latson Company prior to his present employment with his father 
at Cooper’s Pbrms, 7 Dutch Street, New York City* 

The writer checked the records at the New. York County 
Clerk’s Office, New York City, on July 1, 1953* in an effort to 
locate the statement of incorporation of the ACAWC. No records 
of the subject organization have been filed with the New York 
County Clerk’s Office.. 

E* IDENTIFYING DATA ON INDIVIDUALS ASSOCIATED 

WITH ACAWC OFFICERS 

1. RUDOLPH SCHIRMER 

Palm Beach, Florida 

Confidential Informant T-8, of known reliability, ad- 
vised on February 26, 1953,. that RUDOLPH SCHIRMER, a New York 
music publisher, had helped to formulate the Committee for • 
Defense of Western Culture. 

T-l advised on June 26, 1953, that RUDOLPH SCHIRMER, 
the New York music publisher, has not participated in any known 
capacity in the formulation of the ACAWC, and that SCHIRMER is 
presently living in Palm Beach, Florida. 



Sender 

E. M. Latson Com- 
pany 

Marquardt and Com- 
pany 


Address of Sender 

16 East 52nd Street, 
New York City 

155 Spring' Street, 
New. York City 


Chatham Trust 
Company 

Fourth of July 
Committee of 
Maplewood Civic 
Associ ation 


269 Main Street, 
Chatham, New Jersey 

Post Office Box 12, 
Maplewood, New Jersey 




NY 105-6071 

The New York Office has numerous references to RUDOLPH 
£5CHIRMER, hut without additional identifying data, it is 'im- 
possible to locate information pertinent to instant case* 

2. LAWRENCE DENNIS ' , 

* 

Confidential Informant T-8 stated on February 26, 

1953* that LAWRENCE DENNIS helped organize the Committee for 
pefense of Western Culture'* LAWRENCE' DENNIS was a defendant 
'charged with sedition, and tried in the United States District 
Court, District of Columbia, until said court dismissed action 
against the defendant in December of 19I16* 

3* KURT MERTIG 

317 East 54-th Street 
New York City 

Confidential Informant T-8 stated on February 26, 

1953, that KURT MERTIG helped organize the Committee for 
Defense of Western Culture* 



Confidential Informant T-9, of known reliability^ 
advised on June 18, 1952, that MERTIG was founder of the “Citizens 
Protective League”, -which grew out of the “Committee of 500“, 
which had been established to raise defense funds fbr BRUNO 
HAUPTMANN, convicted defendant in the Lindbergh kidnapping case* 


The following description of KURT MERTIG was located in 
the files of the New York Office: 


Birth Date - 
Birth Place 
Naturalization 


Height ' 
Weight 
Eyes 
Hair 

Complexion 


Sept ember 5 , ' 1886 
Leipsig, Germany 
Entered the United States at 
New York City, December 17, 
1916; and was naturalized on 
J anuary 30 , 1931 
5* 10“ 

190 

Brown 

Gray 

Ruddy 


On April 19, 1953, Confidential Informant T-l 
characterized MERTIG as a pro-German radical, who has been ac- 
tive in the past six years, and has recently been ill^ and for 
that reason, is not known to be active at the present time in 
any Fascist organization. 



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NY 105-6071 

k* JAMES A. MADOLE 

22l\. East Main Street 
Beacon, Hew York 

Confidential Informant T-?8 stated on February 26, 1953# 
that a person named MA’DOEE was active in the organization of 
the Committee for Defense of Western Culture* 

T-1‘ stated on April 19, 1953* that JAMES A. MADOLE is 
the head of the NRP, which T-l said is an anti-Semitic Fascist 
group, active in the Yorkville section of Hew York City, KADOLE 
has been conducting street meetings on the behalf of the MRP, 
for the past two years, in which he is the principal speaker, 

T-l further stated that "MADOLE is a Fascist, and advocates 
American Fascism, 


5 * 



Confi dentj al Informant T-6 advised in April of 1953# 

was associated with THOMPSON and FLECKER STE IN 


that 

in the organization of the neo -N azi movement in the United 
States^ T-6 described! Iasi I n-nri g-ha-hAri that 

h© was employed with in Mew 

York City, 


| ] employment was verified bv the writer 

January 30. T-l advised that 


both PLECKEH STEIN and THOMPSON* 


I i s 
\ is 


described as being a radical, anti-Somitic, pro -German youth. 


6. GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERECK 
Hotel Belle Claire 
New York City 


GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERECK was a defendant charged with 
sedition, and tried in the United States District Court, Dis- 
trict of Columbia, until said court dismissed action against 
the defendant in June of 1947* VIERECK was convicted in Fed- 
eral Court, District of Columbia, In i9i|-2, for violating the 
193o Ibreign Registration Act, and was sentenced to serve 
from two to six years in the Federal Penitentiary, and was fined 
S>500 on each of three counts. The conviction was reversed by 


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the Supreme Coidrt of the United States on March 1, 19^3s and 
VIERECK was re-indicted. At his second trial, he wajs. convicted 
on June 16, 19l|3> receiving a sentence of from two to ten 
months on each of six counts, sentence to run consecutively* 
VIERECK entered Atlanta Prison on October 18 , 19i}-3j to serve 
a -term of sixty months • 

Confidential Informant T-l advised that GEORGE 
SYLVESTER VIERECK is a senile old man, who has been active 
in the past in pro-German activities in the United States'* 

T-l said that VIERECK is active at the present time only in 
counselling the younger organizers of the Fascist groups, such 
as JAMES MADOLE, HAROLD KEITH THOMPSON , JR., and EDWARD 
FLECKENSTEIN. 

7. Baron WILLIAM FRARY VON BLOOMBERG 
Boston, Massachusetts 


Confidential Informant T-l advised in April of 19f?3> 
that VON BLO OMBERG at times, has been in touch with WEISS, 
THOMPSON, FLECKENSTEIN, and MADOLE, and has, on one or two 
occasions, addressed neo-Nazi groups in New York City, but T-l 
said that VON BLOOMBERG is not actively associated with the 
current neo-Nazi organizers, or organizations* 

8* r 


that 


Confid ential Informant T-l- advised in April of 19^3 
is known to have associated with WEISS in the 


past, and that h e has taken WEISS many places in his car* 

T-l advised that | | has been observed in conferences 

with WEISS at NRP meetings*-. 


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9. HANS ULRICH RUDEL 


Confidential Informant T-6 advised that during April 
of 1953* the NRP was interested in getting HANS RUDEL, a German 
citizen, to come to the United States to address the NRP* ' 

T-6 stated that he believed that RUDEL was associated with the 
Socialist Reich Party of Germany. 


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NY 105-6071 

Confidential Informant T-10, o f known reliability, 
stated that Colonel HANS ULRICH RUDEL,'who was a leading' 
Luftwaffe pilot during World War IL, is now in Argentina, 
handling aviation matters for the PERON Government. 


10 . 

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On A pril 6, 1953, Confidential Informant T-l advised 
that arrived in the United States from Germany within 

the paslTlnonth, and that FLEC KEN STE IN calledl I 

and said that f l i s present ly a house guest of Baron 

VON BLOOMBERG, and- that ] | is in the United States to 

seek roapproachment between Ger man war veterans and the 
American Legion. T-l said that I I had formerly been 

employed in the German Foreign Office under VON RIBBENTROP. 


11. BENJAMIN H. FREEDMAN 
300. Central Park West 
New York City 

’• Confidential Informant T-7 advised on April 17, 1953 , 
that BENJAMIN PREEDMAN is to be Advisor- on Jewish Affairs of 
the ACAWC* The informant said that FREEDMAN is of Hungarian- 
Jewish parentage, and has been converted to Catholicism. 
FREEDMAN was the promoter of the now defunct League for 
Peace- With Justice In Palestine, which, according to the 
informant, is pro-Arabian and anti-Semitic* T-7 advised 
that THOMPSON has stated that because of his anti-Semitic 
tics, he "has decided to drop BEN PREEDMAN",. giving as his 
reason, "some of tho crow# With money have such violent hatred 
of tho Jews, that even a ropogadd Jaw does not look good to 
them" . 


On April 29, 1953, Confidential Informant £-1 stated 
that BEN FREEDMAN is a sex deviate, and that THOMPSON wanted 
FREEDMAN to finance the ACAWC , and to be a contact man with 
the Arabs. T-l said, that FREEDMAN is a ra.dical, anti-Semitic, 
anti-Zionist individual of the Jewish race. 


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12. A. 0. TITTMAN 



I 


told SA [ 


n 


m 


August of 19 I 4 -/J-J that A. 0. TITTMAM was about seventy years 
old in 19411-, .5>' ‘10” tall, weight II 4.5 pounds, build slender, 
complexion light, wears small mustache and heavy shell-rim 
glasses. . - ’> 


Confidential Informant T-9 said on June 27j 195>0, 
that the. Voters Alliance of Americans of Gorman Ancestry 
was a small organization led by persons with radical ideas, 
who regularly mako anti-Somitic statements* It was formed 
about 191-1-7 , with' A. 0. TITTMAN as the dominating individual,, 
who apparently was the President. In 19f>0, they had a new 
election, and EDWARD A. ELECKEMSTEIN was elected the President. 


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INFORMANTS 

Identity 

of 

Source 



T-2 

Postmaster, 
Chatham, 
New Jersey 


:VE PAGE 



jDatf of Activity 
on^/or 

Description of 
Inform ation 

4/17/53 

4/29/53 

6/26/53 

1952 

; 

3/6/53 


Newark report of 
SA BRYAN F. JINNET, 
JR., 10/9/52, en- 
titled,- “Committee 
for Freedom for Major 
General Remer 1 Com- 
mittee for Interna- 
tional Justice, In- 
ternal Security - X", 
New York file 
105-4674-8 


Newark report of 
SA BRYAN F. JINNET, 
JR., 10/9/52, en- 
titled, “Committee 
for Freedom for, Major 
General Remer | Com- 
mittee for Interna- 
tional Justice, In- . 
ternal Security - X“, 
[New York file 
0.05-4674-8 

rvf - 24 - 


Date 

Received 

Agent to 
Whom 

Furnished 

File No, 

Whore 

Located- 

4/17/53 

SA 1 

105-6128- 

la2 

4/29/53 

SA 

1 1 

Instant 

Report 

6/26/53 

SAl 1 

Instant 
Report , 

12/5/52 

SA 

Instant 

Report 

3/6/53 

SA 

105-4674- 

21 




a o 


by 105-6071 


ADMINISTRATIVE PAGE (Cont* d) 


INFORMANTS (Cont’d) 

Identity Date of Activity Date Agent to File No, 

of and/or Received Whom inhere 

Source Description of Furnished Located 

Information- 



Newark report of 
SA BRYAN F. JINNET, 
JR., 10/9/52, en- 
titled, "Committee 
for Freedom for Major 
General Remer j Com- 
mittee for Interna- 
tional Justice, In- 
ternal Security - X", 
Now York file 
1054j.67lj.~8 



6/18/53 



6/19/53 


6/18/53 



6/19/53 SA JAMES Instant 
P • MARTIN ; Report 
SA 


1952-1953 

April, 

SA PAUL 

105-6071- 


1953 

M. ROTHER- 
MEL 

18 p. 9 

4/17/53 

4 / 17/53 

SAl 1 

105-6071- 

25 

3 A/S 3 

3 / 4/53 

SA 

I 

105-6071- 

25 

105-6071- 

25 

5 / 13 /S 3 

1 

5 / 13/53 

Wi i 


tf tr 





V * 



NY 105-6071 



INFORMANTS (Oont 

Identity 

of 

Source 


1 d) ~ 

Date of Activity 
and/ or 

Description of 
Information 


Date Agent to 

Received Whom 

Furnished 


V 


File No., 
Where 
Locat e d 


T ^8 2 / 26/53 


6/18/52 

6/27/50 


New York file 

105-6071-17 
December,. 1952 


n-o 


Tr»10 


1=12 . 5/6/53 


2/ 26/53 Bur e au 

letter to Newark, 
2/26/53 > regarding 
Committee for Defense 
of Western Culture 

6/18/52 SA JOHN . 100-1631!}.- 

A ..BRODERICK 26l 

6/27/50 SA JOHN 105-117!}-- 

A .BRODERICK l5 


Letter to the Bureau regarding 
"H. KEITH THOMPSON”', dated 
5/19/53 


12/5/52 


sa[ 


105 -!}. 67 '! i .-18 


5/6/53 


SA JAMES 
P. MART IN: 

sa I I 


saT 


105-5759-5 . 



b6 

b7C 

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j 


L 



INFORMANTS (Cont*d) 


Identity 

of 

Source 


Date of Activity Date Agent to File No. 

and/or Received Whom Where 

Description of Furnished Located 

In format ion ' 


May- June, 1953 


May- Juno , SaI 

1953 n 


. Instant 
Rep or t 


U. S. Post Of- 
fice, New York 
City 

MISCELLANEOUS 

Information regarding! I » -i j 

New York file 25-62863-1, entitled, ? ss/- - 19 k l 

^EDITION". I 1 bS/i l9 k i 

t 

Yr,r.k J?6S !?S n f DENNIS is located in New 

AfA5L,t, 97 " 68 - 8 °S> entitled, "UNITED STATES vs. JOSEPH E. 

Me WILL Li MS , was, et. al., LAWRENCE DENNIS, Defendant - SEDITION”. 

York S * VIERECK is located in New 

SSrrf^Q 97 “ l6 °-609, entitled, "UNITED STATES vs. JOSEPH E. 
McWILLLn-lS, was, et. al*, SEDITION". 

i 1 . I> who now resides at I I 

/ I formerly of/ 1 

snown a picture of AfW&UR Agatite Avenue, Chka K o, 

Iliinois, on June 19, 1953- I I st ated that the ’ 

ho ref erred *bo as KURGO whon. intepviowedl 

u- ail .f ld ? n . t L?i- Mi : th .MTHUE KOEGEE, and l I stated that 

he firsu m T et KQEGEL durin g the Suipmer of 1952, at the 1 





"' sT ' --^■1 



/ 


Will ascertain through informants and other appropriate 
sources, whether the ACAWC is actively functioning as an organi- 
zation. 

LOS ANGELES 


At Los Angeles, California: 

\ 

Will ascertain through informants and other appropriate 
sources, whether the ACAWC is actively functioning as an organic 
zation. ^ 

NEWARK j 

i , 

At Newark, Mew Jersey? 

< Wily. ascertain through informants and other appropriate 
sources , , whether the ACAWC is actively functioning as an organi- 
zation. 

NEW Y(3RK ' 

' At New York, Now York? 

‘K 

Will continue investigation of subject organization and 
its activities. 

REFERENCE 


Newark letters to the Bureau, 5/13/53 and I4./22/53 • 
Bureau letter to Newark, 14-/29/53* 

New York Air-Tel to the Bureau, 5/9/53* 

Report of SA , 6/3/53? Chicago, • 



/ 



- 28 



ti - ' ,/ ' ‘ „ * . 

bean ^oturmd* - Sothl jr bow’gry $b& ma^oslsl in. question &tar 

^*4^&H»a,. 


— J&s; fch$ ^aibjeot of & ccisr^at 

^lemiS8aa<?(3' ^Qjdjjr is' ; thn sublet 
bpn^.-uiicierlj^on by the;®o. SMs 
to Xdrainli iitfori^Ltion - 


ISI-C 
oi £ 

4a j 
tar 


• si is, pointed tnsfc tbatl 

%o ®r tera 

' I ^’ x ^&MmUm , tM(ski$ oun^i 


tfaatLn, te‘ jwwatti' *«te taros- 

tafoato^ * 2 *** ^ • 

«**>"*»»* & 

dM tuft intend fa miiBo tha cordoa> af T° '‘^^ w^*-* l S orgardtttton ; 

«*atto odwfaisfc^SS. — / **4 l booausa «m 


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and- stated tft tl 1H0MPS0K mdl iia .maU seoretarj 

T tvrobabrf l |T"w recently _ depa rted. for E qi3 ^oy -whS ES: 

they were, to attend, a large If azi meetings I , .i . . — 

that- THOMPSON, -intended maIcSoNIO^ '<■ 

Labor Party ticket under the - sponsorship Of Y ^ fl ^?ded going to 
— — 1 further stated that ««atA |. avoided , go xng ^o 

isSr w Mlth the'-Air Pproe. Resem-.W. tot! 

was attetiding.suaener sotool, although, in fact, » 

1 said that SWAN still conducts meetings of his 

tn h ji home | [ further advised that he. had not attended uny 

S ilLs of- th e lfiijonaa Renaissance Party recently .and had ,ne_t . 

.seen! [or I I . . . ‘ ' , ; 


0% ' 10R-6ii’P 

.1 - 10 £-^ 5 ? 


ALL Hi 






SABjMBG 


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table op contests 


ORIGIN, SCOPE .'UN GENERAL ACTIVITIES ON TTTE 
TT • TI0TT HEN '*T'3S ANCB P ART! . " ~ 


B ‘ • INDIVIDUALS CONNECTED PITS THE MRP.., ? 

1 . Individuals * ho Control NRP... 7 

JAMES H. KADOLE ' a 

FREDERICK 7. 0 . ’ EISS 1 ! !!;!!** - 


GEORGE S. VTERECE, 

KURT MERTIG 

MRS. GR.GE H ADOBE 


2, Individuals .ho Take Active Part In 
NRP Activities . 


EUSTACE MTrr.T.TWfl 


1 


... 0. TITTIOI 



b* 


3. Individuals Connected ’ . 'ith The NRP 
■* *n The Past 


COPIES CONTPUJED 


1 - Boston (RM) 

1 - Chicago (RM) 

2 - (rm) * T 7 

2 - Louisville- (RM) 

1 - Los aigeles (RM) 

2 - Milwaukee ( n M) 

L - Newark (RM) 

l - Philadelphia (rm) 


9 

. 12 
. 13 
. 13 


1 U 


lh 

1 U 

15 

15 

16 
16 
16 
17 

is 


18 


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ny ic-5-6112 

The National Renaissance Party -will be referred to 
hereinafter as the 17PJP. 

A. ORIGIN, SCOPE AMD GENERAL ACTIVITIES OP THE KRP 


Confidential Informant T-l, of known reliability, advised 
in July, 1953, that the NRP ’.-as originated in I 9 J +8 by JAMES I-I. MADOLE and 
has been functioning as such ever since. He said that j.ADOLS has maintained 
leadership of the party and that he is the motivating force in all of its 
activities. This informant said that MADOLE had formed a group called 
Youth for America while he was attending Beacon High School, at Beacon,- New 
York in 19^6, and that he carried over the ideas and organization of that 
group to form the NRP. Informant stated that he believes the NRP is 
restricted to the New York area, although he says that efforts have been made 
to organize other groups from time to time in such cities as Atlanta, Los 
Angeles, Philadelphia, Dayton, Louisville and Chicago. He said that this fact 
had been publicized in past issues of the party publication, the '‘National 
P.enaissance Bulletin". 

T-l stated that MADOLE has gathered a group of pro-German, 
anti-Semitic radicals into this party, some of whom have been active for years 
in other pro-German organizations in the Yorkville Section of New York City. 

He further stated that although the party literature carries the address 221+ 

East Main Street, Beacon, New York, which is the residence of MADOLE and his 
mother, that there actually is no party headquarters, and that they rent 
various places in Yorlcville for their meetings, or hold them on street comers. 

T-l concluded that although it appears that the NRP is 
solely a He 1 # York City organization being used to spread pro -German, anti- 
Semitic propaganda, it is his belief that the NRP could be part of a large 
world-wide plan to discredit the present German government and hinder the 
United States State Department in its plans -for unification of 'Western Europe. 

Confidential Informant T-2, of unknown reliability, advised 
in April, 1953, that he did not know when the NRP came into existence nor did 
he know anything of the facts surrounding the origin of the party. He did state, 
however, that while the NRP is ostensibly nationalistic in scope, the only 
activity of the organization is centered in the state of New York. He stated 


-h- 





1 0 
l I 


•w 


* 



1 


NY 105-6112 


the NEP has its headquarters in New York City, is a loosely forced group 
“ 1 ° p P° s ®^ t° Co rnnunism, the present government of 'Astern Germany the^ 
present United States government, and is antii-Semdtic and. pro-Nazi! 

ha hoT - o t . Concerning the actual headquarters of the NEP. T-2 stated 

nitv for S fi? g f 0UP USe ? 3 private hal1 at l6 9 East 86th Street, New York 
Citj, for all meetings and rallies of a public and semi-public nature 

thatThe^m? had p ° ssibla headqaa ^ e rs, t- 2 stated it was his understanding 
tnat the NBP nad oome sort of a permanent office at 22h East Fain street * 

York * T-2 stated lie did not know the significance of the frp 

S2^-2?- BeaC0 ^ , / e ? IOrkj but - believed ^ to be thl headquarters for 
the printing and distribution of the NEP literature. 

mpr , +innori a .. his informant revealed that in addition to the afore- 
^ rn -^^f?' eSSe ^ t b -e HHP also meets on a frequent basis at the Mt. Hope 

The 1 inf or^n+ °h 0US ^ u-™ York ^ whlch farm is owned .by FREDERICK ‘7EISS. 

this ffrm on a f^nn ! that these meetings were being conducted at 

this farm on a frequent basis because such meetings have always been in 
progress whenever the informant visited this farm. ‘ " 


j . , , J \ 2 stated that most of the important business of the >mp 
is conducteo at tms farm by leaders, of the group.,. Re further stated that 
before any person, other than one of the leaders of the NRP, can attend anv 
meetings held on the farm, the permission of FREDERICK weiss has to be obtained. 

. , According to T-2, the NR? hopes to increase its size and 

importance by drawing membership from college students. 

r. ^ stated that the FRP is opposed to the imprisonment of 

former i-.azi leaders and is dedicated to working for their release The 

part^ , St I-? d th ?- ”“ bers of the snip ai»ys excuse Germany and’ the nasi . 

If? ' ;brW ’ 1ar IX. T-2 stated the members of the PDF ' 

believe that the alliance of the United States during World War t t shmld 
have, been with Germany and against the Soviet mZZ ' ~ 5h0dld 

The "New York Compass" dated November 20, I9k9, carried 
a story under the headline "He Hants to bo Fuehrer" by HARPY 
sets out the origin of the NRP and background 


I 


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NY 105-6112 



is set out in part as follows? 

“This is a story of a young man who dreams of being America's 
Fuehrer, who is trying now to unite all the anti-Semitic, nationalist and 
racist groups in the East behind him. This is the story of how he lives, 
how he works, and how he got that way. 

' "Newspapers recently carried accounts of a swaggering, 
brown shirted JAiJES H. MADOLE, leader of the Nazi-like National Renaissance 
Party, claiming before a Philadelphia audience that he helped organize 
the riots at the PAUL ROBESON Peekskill Concerts. He reportedly said, 

*1 was very proud to have had a part in organizing it; It was 3,000 veterans 
against 12,000 Jews and 3,000 veterans against 12,000 Jews is enough.' 

"MAD0LE assured me stiffly that he was the leader of the 
National Renaissance Party which he said stood- for government by the ' intellec- 
tual elite ’ • 


"Yftien I brought up the peekskill riots he seemed -both. 
frightened and proud. I said the papers had reported that he claimed in 
Philadelphia to have helped organize the riots, was that true? 'Tell a few 
of our fellows (members of the National Renaissance Party) may have been there 
but I can't make any definite quote on that'. 

lf Later he gave me a different version of how he cape to 
claim credit for the riot violence-. He said it was all McFAplANtj'S fault, 
meaning YTLLT&F H, McFARLA’D, head of the fascist Nationalist Action League 
of Philadelphia, and whom FAD0LE recently made Pennsylvania director of his 
National Renaissance Party. 

"MD0LE says his NR? is derived from 'animism', a philosophy 
he developed himself which is based on 'values of indiyidual personality, 
private enterprise, and government by the intellectual elite.*' ’ He. attacks 
democracy as 'rule by the ignorant mss' and rejects the 'liberal democratic 
line] which he calls 'the general idea of breaking down all forms of .racial 
pride and the general idea of mohgrelization of the races.* 



I 


NY IC-5-6112 


,r He believes animism would create a scientific society 
ruled by the best scientific minds and no layman can vote on a scientist. 

On a more practical, immediate level he is for private enterprise, the open 
shop, re industrialization of Germany and Japan, friendship with Spain. 

"Every few weeks he holds street comer rallies in Christian 
Front neighborhoods in the Bronx and Yorkville. Twice banned by the police", 
he claims the ban was lifted by intercession of a Congressman friend,* He 
tries to appeal to veterans, although he is not one himself. He claims lli5 
members in the Bronx. In Yorkville he has picked up some of the old German- 
American Bund membership through the cooperation of KURT HERTIG, head of the 
pro-Nazi Citizens Protective League, In Queens he has acquired the remnants 
of ^ the Christian Front through 0. DANIEL KURTS, its former director. In 
Philadelphia, he claims 300 members, former followers of the fascist Nationalist 
Action League.’ He also claims members in the deep South, particularly in 
Atlanta, 


"MADOLE uses the U. S, mails to distribute anti-Semitic 
and nationalist tracts, bundles of which he receives from various nationalists 
for resale. Some of the material he imports from Sweden and other foreign 
powers," 


It is to be noted, that the German-American Fund, Citizens 
Protective League and the Nationalist Action League, mentioned in the above 
article, have been designated by the Attorney General of the United States 
pursuant to Executive Order 10lj.5>0. 

B. INDIVIDUALS CONNECTED ’ ; TTN THE NRP 


I. Individuals "/ho Control Th e NRP 

Confidential Informant T-l, previously mentioned, in July, 
195>3 , stated that there never has been any set up of officers for the NR? 
but that MADOLE has appeared, to be in complete control during the party* s 
activities. He said that from time to time MAUQLE Has allied himself 
with other persons whose advice he accepted and who may have had various 
titles, but there have been very frequent changes among these advisors as 
disagreements arose over the party's policies." 


-7 


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r.: 105-5112 


This informant said that the people who presently appear 
to control the party either by active participation or by counselling MADOLE 
are: 


FREDERICK ’«EISS 
GEORGE S. VIEFECK 
KURT MERTIG 


Confidential Informant T-2 advised in April, 1953 that the 
NRP has no officers as such, but that from tiis observations during 1-952 and 
1953} he believes the followingvere acting as leaders and advisors of this 
group: 


FREDERICK EEISS 
H. KEITH THOMPSON 
ED’TARD A. FLECKENSTEIN 


JAMES MADOLE 

GEORGE SILVESTER VTSRECK 


Confidential informant T-3, of unknown reliability, advised 
in October, 19U9 that he had attended a meeting of the MRP on October 7> 19^9 
and that he belie ved them to be a fasci st grown whose nf fi r-ers were .t a • .eh 


MADOLE, director; [ 


and 


t 


JAMES H. MADOLE 
22if East Main Street 
Beacon, Mew York 


T-l stated in July,, 1953 that MADOLE had been the leader of 
the NRP throughout its existence and that it ms his personal zeal and- 
continued work that had kept it in existence.. He said that MADOLE had been 
very sickly as a child, having an asthmatic condition and was raised by 
his mother as his father had died while he was quite young. He said that 
MADOLE probably had a fixation on his mother and that his political activities 
had been encouraged and directed by his mother since the time that MADOLE - 
ms in high school. 


-8- 


NT 105-6112 


T-i said that HAJDOLE has appealed at all the meetings -which 
have ever been held by the NRP as its principal speaker, and whereas others 
have come in from time to time as speakers, he always appeared to be iii 
complete charge of the meetings. This informant alsb pointed out that, all 
literature distributed by the NRP carries MADOLE’S name and home address and 
many of the articles in the ’’National Renaissance Bulletin" are attributed 
to him. This informant said that MADOEE appears to be a rabid fascist who 
imagines himself to be a fuehrer. Be stated that MAUOEE has expressed a 
bitter hatred of the Jewish race and that this hatred has carried over into 
becoming one of the primary tenets of the party. He said that KIBOLE has 
never worked very long at any .iob but has spent most of his time working 
for the party and is probably supported by his mother* 

T-2 stated that he knew very -little concerning KA.D0LE 
other than he was allegedly head of the NRP in Beacon, New York. He said 
that during his brief acquaintance with RIDDLE he came to know him as a 
fanatic believer in Nazism, evidenced by his conversations concerning 
Nazi Germany and the Nazi Party. T-2 stated that he could not recall, however, 
any specific statement made by M&D0LE indicating his adherence to the Nazi 
form of government. 

Confidential Informant T-lt, of unknown reliability, stated 
in July, 1953 that HAUOEE was a very radical fascist who believed that 
HITEER was the greatest man who ever lived. He said that MAEOLE via s also 
violently anti-Semitic and expressed the idea that all Jews in the United 
States should be killed. 


MEDERICK CHAREES ESHDIFAED EEIS-3 
156 Grand Street 
Ihite plains. New York 
. and 

ITeiss Farm, Kt . Hope, New York 


' In April of 1953, T-l advised that REISS is the owner of 
the EeBlanc Publishers, 'incorporated. Box 155, 208 East 36th Street, New York 
City, and that through this business he writes and distributes anti-Semitic, 
pro -German literature . ' T-l further advised that "EISS is the guiding influence 
behind the pro-German, neo-Nazi organizations in the United States, although 
he holds no office in any of these organizations other than that of executive 
secretary of the American Committee for the Advancement of Tostern Culture, 
which T-l described as a recently formed group headed by KEITH THOMPSON, of 
a pro-German, neo-Nazi character. 


■ 9 - 



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NY 105-6112 


T-l advised that 

REISS made the statement that he, 'EIS3, had paid Tor the meeting hall for 
the HEP meeting on February 21, 1953, and also paid for the HEP literature 
and the publication of the "national Renaissance Bulletin” . T-l stated 
that inasmuch as ’.vEISS is an alien ho is afraid of being deported if he 
appears to be active in fascist-Uazi movements, therefore, REISS has remained 
in the background and controls the leaders of the various neo-Nazi 
organizations. 


T-l advised further that "EI3S has been advisor to KEITH 
THOMPSON, EB’RED 1. ELECKR T STE T N and J.YES RIDDLE, whom T-l terms as 
leaders of the alleged neo-Nazi groups in the United States. 

T-l stated that "EISS also writes and publishes articles 
supporting the neo-Nazi movement in the United States and that he recently 
has been in correspondence with Germans in Irgentina and Germany. T-l stated 
that until about December, 1952, REISS’ writings were pro neo-rNazi,' anti- 
Semitic and anti-Communist. T-l further related that since that time he has 
noticed that "EI8S has toned down, his anti-Communist writings. 



money -with the "Russkys”. 

T-l further advised that about February 26, 1953' REISS 
had stated that he had shown these “Russkys” that he could produce if and 
when they came across and that REISS had stated that the "Eusskys" had offered 
him 01^00 a few weeks before but that they would have to give him at least 
$50,000 and that he would not put his neck in a noose for less. 

T-l stated that it was his opinion from the above that 
REISS meant that the "Russkys" ranted REISS to continue writing propaganda 
in the United States against the re-arming of '"ostem Germany, but that he 
does not know exactly what REISS has to do for this money.. The informant 
pointed out that the "Russkys" could -be either “hite Russians or Communists, 
but that he could furnish no information regarding the identity or background 
of these "Russkys". 


- 10 - 


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FY 105-6112 


T-l advised that on the morning of April 13, 1953, VEISS 
had stated that he intended to urge ED'ARD A* 1UECKENSTEIN, E3ITH THOMPSON, 
JAMES MADOLE and others allied with German organizations, to picket KONRAD 
ADENAUER while the latter was in New York City, T-l stated that subsequently 
on that same day, VEISS had changed his mind and informed the above persons 
that he advocated no picketing of ADENAUER while the latter was visiting the 
United States. T-l related that the other leaders thereupon agreed with 
VEISS that no neo-Nazi groups in the New York area would demonstrate against 
the ADENAUER visit. 

T-2 advised in April, 1953 that ' El 33 is a writer of political 
science whose works were favorable to Germany under the Nazi rule. He stated 
that r <EISS has a home at 156 Grand Street, ‘Thite Plains, New York .but usually 
resides at the Mt. Hope Ehrm, which is near Middleborough, New York. T-l 
stated that VEISS uses this farm as a meeting place for su ch members of the NP.P 
as KEITH THOMPSON, GEORGE V7IEHECK, EDVARD FTEOKEFSTEIN and I ~1 This 

informant said that "ETSS is extremely cautious regarding outsiders and 
usually remains in the background of NEP meetings. 

T-2 stated that during the summer of 1952 THOMPSON had 
referred to VEISS as the "in-between man" between the NEP and the "real 
people". T-2 stated that he did not know what THOMPSON meant by the "real 
people" but believes | I THOjUPSON was 

referring to certain missing Nazi leaders allegedly hiding in South America. 

The informant stated that VEISS openly boasted that he was 
one of the instigators of the riot which occurred in Peekskill, New York 
during the appearance of PAUL ROBESON. Informant said he had no knowledge 
of the truth or falsity of this statement other than VEI C S' own admission. 

T-2 said that VEISS had often boasted that he had sources 
of information in political groups and la?/ enforcement agencies in the United 
States but that he did not elaborate on this statement or identify any 
of his sources of information. 


T-2 described ‘ EISS as pro-Nazi in that he excuses the Nazis 
for any blame in Vorld Var H and because he desires r elease of all Nazi 
war criminals. T-2 stated. he recalled that I I mentioned during 1952 

that VEISS used a mail drop to conduct NPJP business but the informant was 
unable to amplify this stateirant-. T-2 described VEISS as an alien in his 


- 11 - 


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\ 


NY 10^-6112 


sixties and an ex-Captain in the Germany artillery during ".orld "-'ar I. 

T-2 stated that "EISS has large holdings in real estate 
and apartme nt houses in the New York City area. He further said that THOMPSON 
and | I had said during 1952 that “EISS donated a considerable amount of 

money to the NRP from money obtained through these holdings. 


he 

hie 


GEORGE SILVESTER VIEPECK 
Hotel Belleclaire 
New York City 



Confidential Informant T-l advised that GEORGE S. VIERECK 
is a senile old man who has been active in the past in pro-German activities 
in the ISaited States and that he formerly was an agent for the German govern- 
ment during ".orld '^ar I and "orld ’’ar II. The informant said that VIERECK 
is active at the present time in counselling the younger organizers of the 
fascist groups, such as JAMES HiPOLE, KEITH THOMPSON and FLECKENSTEIN. 

This informant said that VIEPECK frequently has meeting at his hotel which 
are attended bv numbers of the pro-German organizations m Hew York City. 

He said th at MADGQ^ has sought advice from VIEPECK on many occasions and that 
because o? T VIEEEJCK^ S reputation and experience, HAU0LE is inclined to do 
most anything that VIERECK advises. 


It is to be noted that GEORGE SYLVESTER VIEPECK was a 


defendant charged with sedition and tried in the United States District Court, 
District of Columbia, but this action was dismissed in June of 19^7. VIERECK 
was convicted in Federal Court, District of Columbia in 19l|2 for violating 
the 1^38 Foreign Registration Act and was sentenced to serve from two. to 
six years in the Federal penitentiary and was fined ”)500 on each of three 
counts. This conviction was reversed by the Supreme Court of the United 
States on March 1, 19h3. s and VIERECK was later re-indicted. At the second 
trial he was convicted June 16, 19U3, receiving a sentence of from two to 
ten months on each of six counts, sentence to run consecutively. VIERECK 
entered Atlanta Prison on October 13, 19U3 to serve a term of 60 months. 


T-2 stated that VIERECK is employed as a writer and 
described VIERECK as a pro-Nazi who previously served a sentence in the 
Federal penitentiary for subversive activity on behalf of the Nazis. He said 
that VIERECK had been present at several meetings held during 1952 at '.EISS* 
farm in Middlebo rough, New York, where other leaders of the NRP were present. 
T-2 stated that VIERECK, like ''.EISS, usually remains in the background and 
is not openly known as a member of the NRP. 


- 12 - 



NY 105-6112 


T-2 said that AEISS was interested in placing VIERECK in 
the Stuberi Society of Chicago during 1952. The informant said that \EISS 
intended using KUEGEL, head of the Stuben Society, to place T7IERECK within 
that group but was unsuccessful because 7IERSCK refused to become a member. 
T-2 said that 1EISS 1 purpose in placing VISEECK in this group was to use him 
to guide the Stuben Society toward the aims and objectives of the FRP. 

KDHT MEETIG 

317 East 5Uth Street 

New York City 


T-l' stated that USRTIG is a pro-German radical who has been 
active in German organizations for the past fifteen years. He said that 
MEETIG had been active in the NRP several years ago but that illness had 
forced him to cease his activities. He stated, however, thai in July, 1953 
jSRTTG had again appeared at NR? meetings and was a speaker at one street 
meeting on July 10, 1953. He said that K ]RTIG had been sent to Rylcers Island, 
New York for six months on February 28, 19^6 for inciting to riots and 
unlawful assembly in connection with his pro-C-erman, anti-Semitic activities* 

Confidential Informant T-5, of known reliability, advised 
that M3RTIG was the founder of the Citizens protective League, which grew 
out of the Committee of the Five Hundred, which was established to raise 
funds for BRUNO HAUPTMANN, convicted defendant in the Lindberg Kidnapping 
Case. 

It is to be noted that the Citizens Protective League was 
cited by the Attorney General pursuant to Executive Order lOlj.50. 


Mrs. GRACE MADOLE 
22 I 4 East Main Street 
Beacon , New York 

T-l stated in July, 1953 that Mrs. GRACE MAEOLE had been 
employed at the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, New York City, for many 
years and she has raised her son, JvMES, at their Beacon, Mew York home from 
early childhood when his father died. He said that Mrs. MADOLE had always 
been in the background of her son|s activities and has encouraged him in his 
political endeavors. He said" that JAMES MADOLE 1 3 anti-Semitic,. pro-German zeal 


.- 13 - 


HI 105-6112 



has been instilled in him by his mother. This informant said that Mrs. 
IliDOLE has attended many of the meetings of the NRP ahd has counselled 
JAMES concerning the' organization and operation of the REP. This informant 
stated that he believes JAMES is completely devoted to his mother and 
vdll do anything that she directs. 


2, Individuals ~ ho Take An Active Part In The HRP 

T-l stated that the following individuals appear to be 
presently taking an active part in the activities of the * T RP; 

EUNICE CL \EENCE MULLINS 
60 East l|th Street 
Apartment 19 
We?; York City 


T— 1 stated that MULLINS has been associated v/ith the nrp 
for several years and has attended most of the recent meetings and taken an 
active part in many of these meetings. He stated that IfULLINS has been active 
in German organizations in the past and acted as treasurer and financial 
advisor of the American Committee for the Advancement of estem Culture. 

Confidential Informant T-6,, of unknown reliability, stated 
in June, 1953 that MULLINS is a frequent contributor to anti-Semitic articles 
which appear in the "National Renaissance Bulletin" and the "BROOM", which 
he described as an anti-Semitic, pro-German pamphlet which was formerly 
distributed in Yorkville but is no longer being published. 

This informant said that MULLINS was bom in Roanoke, Virginia 
on March 9, 1923 and was discharged from a minor position with the Library of 
Congress for admitted authorship of racist articles. 


Address Unknown 


T-l stated that 


I has been associated with the NRP 
recently and has taken an active part i i the outdoor meetings held by the 

said that I I ha's been a speaker at many of these 


b6 

b7C 


party during 1953. He 
meetings and also acts as 


1 The 


that' 


i r -..w informant said that 

s_a_very poor speaker and has a sloppy unkept appearance. He stated 
has often appeared at the street meetings in a drunken condition 


-lit- 


NY 105-6112 


and it appears that REISS will force luDOEE to stop allowing to 
speak at the meetings. 

T-U stated in July, 1953 that escorts KADOLE to and 
from the meetings of the NRP in order to protect him. He said that | | 
does not appear to be very intelligent and faakes many incoherent statements 
during his speeches at the party -meetings. 



T-l stated that | I is a youth who has attended all 
of the meetings of the NRP and has assiste d KAROLS in conducting t hese 
meetings. He said that I I duty is to | ' ^ while 

MADOLB speaks at these street meetings, T-l said that | | had been listed 

| of the Youth Section of the American Committee for the Advancement of 

Western Culture i n Milwaukee and that a recent "national Renaissance Bulletin" 
had listed him as | ~|of the uniformed corps of the NRP in New York City. 


Th is informant stated that| | lived| 

whom he stated were Thi s • informant stated that subsequent 

to an NRP meeting on July 10. 1953. 1 ""h as seen saying goodbye to other 
members of the party and indicated that he was returning to his home in 
| from which he had come here in early 1953. 


.Address Unknown 


T-l stated that I I h as appeal ed at a ll of the 

meetings held b y t he NRP in 1953. He said that I I usually ] 

| with | at these meetings and at times has appeared dressed 

in a black un iform intended to imitate a German storm trooper. He said 
th at I had also been listed in a recent "National Renaissance Bulletin" 

as the uniformed corps in wew York City. 


- 15 - 



? T Y 105-6112 


A. - 0 . TITTMAN 

' Address Unknown 

— 

T-l stated that i.'O. TT7TMAN has attended most of the 
meetings held by the NEP during 1953 and he has frequently made short 
speeches at these meetings. T-l stated that he had formerly been president 
of the Voters Alliance for Americans qf German Ancestry, and said that he 
has been active in pro-German activities in Yorkville for many years. T-l 
said that MADOLE allows TITTiiAT to speak at meetings because he is a frequent 
contributor to the party and has recently paid for a complete issue of the 
’•National Renaissance Bulletin". 

T-5 described the Voters Alliance for Americans of German 
Ancestry in June, 1950 as a small organisation led b - '" persons with radical 
ideas who regularly make anti-Semitic statements. 


T-l stated that I I is a member of the NRP v/ho regularly 
attends the meeting s although he does not take a prominent part in th em. 

He said that l l is T ~| 

"National Renaissance Bulleti n" and other literature nut out bv the na-Hw. 
He said that M'-DOLB gives the | 


-•.aaress unienown 


T-l has advised that MADOLE has attended all the party 
meetings held, during 1953 and that he has frequently acted as I 1 

a nd to MADOLE. T-l said that he does not know the background of 

this individual but that he appeared with the party this year , and is not well 
known by any of the older members. 


- 16 - 



i 




FT 105-6112 ' 


years old. 


T-l riesryHh ftd 


i 


as a 


and swarthy complexion. 


Confidential Informant T-^7, of known reliability, stated 
that at the NR? meeting held on Au gust 7, 1953, an individual who was standing 
in the crowd pointed to| |and said, "Now I know where I've seen you h( r 

before - You used to be m une xoung Communist League - ".hat are you doing b 7c 
with these fascists?" 


T-7 further stated thatf 


these meetings accompanied byj 


has appeared at most of 


It is to be noted that the Young Communist League has been 
cited by the Attorney General as pursuant to Executive Order 10U50. 


T-l* stated in July, 1953 that he h ad met 
meeting held by the NRP and that he understood that I 

* y _ • ^ . . I I _ . _ _ ■ 


, at a street 

] vas a Communist. 


bo 

b7C 

b7D 


attended the Jefferson School a nd is presently 


He said he believed that 

a teacher in some other Communist school. He said that, , 

of six or eight youths which meets at his apartment every Thursday night, 
where political theory is discussed. He said that he does not know the 


has a group 


political sympathies of the other mem bers of this group but 

l apartment is decora tect with pictures of 
S'i.ujL.It'1 , LENIN and other Communist symbols. He said that | | has recently 

had members of this group dress up in black shirts, black pants, black hats 
and wearing red arm brassards, and appeared at TTRP street meetings to appear 
as' German storm troopers. 


T-l stated that has had begun appearing at HR? street 

meetings in June of 1953 and that ms oackground was not known, but that he 
appa rently ca me into the party under rather suspicious circumstances. He said b6 
appears to be in charge of the youths who appear at the street b7c 


that 


meetings dressed a s storm t roopers. T-l further stated that at a meeting held 


on August 7, 1953, 


was joined by three young girls who also put on 


party arm brassards upon their arrival at the meeting. The informant stated 
he did not know the identity of these three girls. 


J 


-17- 


b6 

’b7C 


i t 

» • 

X l 




HY 105-6112 


Address Unknown 

• T-l stated in July of 1953 thai j I is an old time pro- 
German organizer who va.s in the NRP sev eral ye ars ago but broke with MAU0L3 
over party policy. Informant said that | | vas with the anti- Vivisect ion 

League for a while and appeared at an NRP meeting on July 10* 1953. He 
later spoke at a meeting on July 2l|* 1953 and helped members of the partv oass 

rtl ^ mu ■ n _ < * ' i i i i . 


out literature. The informant said that it appears that 
an active member of the NRP. 


xs again 


3. Individuals Connected Mth The NRP In The Past 


T-l stated that the membership of the NRP fluctuates 
constantly* that individuals appear in the party for a while and then drop 
out. He said that divergence of opinion is continually developing and 
petty jealousies arising among, the members. He said that frequently these 
people later return to the party. 

T-l said that the following persons appear to have been 
connected 7/ith the NRP in the past but currently are not active: 

HIROLP KEITH THOMPSON* JR. 

380 Main Street 

Chatham* New Jersey 


T-l stated that KEITH THOMPSON had ceased to attend 
meetings of the NRP in June, 1953 because he did not agree with the manner 
in which M1D0LE was conducting these meetings. Pie said that THOMPSON had 
been a speaker at many of the NRP meetings since February* 1953 and on one 
occasion had been introduced to Ml DOLE as a national NRP candidate for 
Congress from the Yorkville section. This informant said that THOMPSON had 
stated he would not speak at any more of these meetings and was extremely 
critical of M IDOLS' S radical ideas and exhibitionism. T-l further stated 
that THOMPSON had been active for the past year in several pro-German* neo-Nazi 
organizations* including the Imerican Committee for the -Idvancement of Testern 
Cul ture. He sa id that THOMPSON closely associated with ED' .1RD FLECKEI'TSTEIN 
an d | I and he described all these individuals as homosexuals. 


- 18 - 


1 




'"I 10f?~6ll2 


T-2 stated in April of 1953 that THOMPSON is a public front 
for the NRP and is usually the guest speaker at all NRP meetings. He describe 
THOMSON as pro -Nazi, anti-Semitic and pro-Arab. This informant explained 

that concerning THOMPSON'S being pro-lrab, that THOMPSON believes in complete 
independance from all foreign control for all the irab nations as well as 
absorption of the state of Israel by the adjoining Arab states. 

JThis informant stated that THOMPSON is generally recognized 
as the leader of the NRP and maintains in his home a complete file of all 
members of the NRP including photographs. 

This informant stated that THOMPSON had told him that he was a 
courier for the party when he was sixteen years old but did not elaborate 
in this statement. The informant said he understood this to mean the neo-Nazi 
movement. 


Informant stated that THOMPSON is an ex-naval officer 
of the United States Navy and is registered as a foreign agent for the "Nazi 
Party". T-l stated that he has received literature from OTTO HEMER, head 
of the revived Nazi Party in Germany. 

EDTiRD A. FLECKENSTEIN 
39 Kings avenue 
Tehawken, New Jersey 


T-2 advised in Ipril of 1953 that 1L.ECKENSTEIN has acted 
as legal advisor to the NRP since the summer of 1952. 

T-l stated that FLECKENSTEIN has been active in pro-German 
groups for several year's and became interested in the NRP during 1953. He 
said that FLECKENSTEIN has been closely associated with other leaders in 
the German field such as THOMPSON, "EISS and VIERECK. He further stated 
that FLECKENSTEIN is currently president of the Voters Alliance for Americans 
of German 'ncestry and has been touring Germany since May, 1953 , making speeches 
at meetings of extreme "rightist parties against the ADENAUER government. 

This Germany trip of FLECKENSTEIN ' S has been mentioned at the NRP meetings 
and also the fact that he took with him thousands of copies of an article v/hich 
he wrote, severly criticizing the .NWIUSR government, to be distributed in 
Germany. Informant, stated that it v/as his belief that these statements were 
made at the NRP meetings by order of ".EISS in order to bring TLECKEil STEIN S 
activities in Germany to the attention of the Federal authorities. 


-19- 



J 



I* 




HY 10^-6112 


It is to be noted that the "New York Times" dated iugust 9 , 
1953 carried a news item from Germany stating that PLECKEMSTEIN had been 
ordered out of Germany because of the speeches he had been making in connection 
with the National Bloc, a rightist group in Germany. 


6f[ 


T-2 advised in 


known |_ 


jnril of 1953 that 
_| New York City. 


is an employee 

. - „ . Informant sta'tod he has 

J for several years a nd has f ound him to be imperialistic and 
militaristic. He explained that | | believes in Nazism to the extent 

that he wants the power and prestige that membership and leadership in the 
neo-Nazi group would bring. 


b6 

b7C 


He described Q 


violently opposed to the present 
governments. , 


l as anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi who is 
Testem Germany ' and the United States 


NHP 

had 


T-l stated thatf 


1 is snnn1.vi.npr_ information to the 

said ^ 


^ , Ho said | | 

]gets this information or what infor mation h e is 

J uses 


not, stated where | 

able to furnish to the MRP. It is the informant's opini on that [ 
the informatio n that comes into his possession through | 

I I for the benefit of the F.RP* 


b6 

b7C 

b7D 


T-l stated in July, 1953 that | | is 

associate of THOMPSON and FLECKEWSTEIF . He said that | 


very close 
was' active 


in the WRP during the time that THO MPSON ha d been engaged in working for 


the party but that he believed that 
NRP since THOMPSON had dropped out. 


no longer was interested in the 


Informant reiterated the fact that THOMPSON and 
were sex deviates. 


be 

b7C 


'.ddress Unknown 


T-7 advised in July, 1953 
at a meeting of the NRP and spoke briefly. 


that 


| was present 

•bated he was not a 


b6 

b7C 


-20- 



; 



BY 10^-6112 


member of the MR? and 7a s not associated with people of the HP.F, but believed 
that they should be given a fadr chance to present their views to the public. 

Co nfidential Inform ant T-8, another Government agency, stated 
in pay of 1951 that | 1 spoke at a meeting of the HEP held on 

May 15, 1951 at the York Cafe . 501 East 8iyt h Street , He w York City. This 

informant said that | C laimed to be a | ~| and a | ~ 

and that his speech ms full of praise for the Klu Klux Elan, as well as 
being anti-Semitic. 


PETER I. X./VIJR 

16 South Patterson Boulevard 

Dayton 2, Ohio 


T-l advised in July, 1953 that X'i/IBR had been in contact with 
M'DOLE in the past and had been a guest speaker at HEP meetings during 1952. 

T-8 advised in May of 1951 that PETER X ’ VIER was formerly from 
Hiclcsville, Long Island and also author of a book called "Arise America 11 . 

This’ informant said that XAVIER was recently let out of the \rmy because he 
had been distributing subversive material throughout his stay as a Corporal 
in a Mew Jersey camp and also in a Delaware camp. 

Confidential Informant T-9, of known reliability, advised 
in March, 1953 that XAVIER had previously been associated with a nti-Se mitic, 
anti-'legr o and anti-United Nations organizations and is known to I I 

I I Tfh °l . / I 

He s aid that I | vras formerly associated-, with GERALD L. E. SMITH and 

that | | organization advocated white supremacy. This informant 

also said that XYPIER is associated with the anti-Semitic publication 
"Dayton Independent". 


Address Unknown 


T-l stated in July, 1953 that I I is a German 

alien who has been sell ing pro-German, anti-Semitic li teratur e at his 

~| f or twelve years. He said tha 1 1 | ha s attended 

meetings of the MRP in the past and is friendly with the loaders of the NRP 
but that he does not believe I i to be an active member of the party. 


- 21 - 




NY 105-6112 



, . „ T 7 1 si ^ted in July, 1953 that | had been a 

| |of the NRP for s everal y ears and had made speeches in its behalf. 

He ^stated, however, that ! I is presently residing in| 
and it is not believed that he is active in behalf of tho NRP. 

T-Q a ji vised in March, 1953 that| | is the 

.. 1 of the . 'jnerica n Committee for the advancement of 

.estern Culture. He said that I is anti-Semitic, anti -Negro and anti- 

communist and has been active in groups advocating those principles. 

Mill'll H, McF.KEAFD 
876 Granite Street 
Philadelphia , Pennsylvania 

. T-1 advised in July, 1953 that NcMRLiNP had been active 
the Nationalist lotion League of '.merica in the past and that he visited 
IkDOLE in 1950 in Now York and attended meetings of the NRP with the idea 
of merging the NRP and the Nationalist Action League. T-l said that this 
merger nevor came about and that he does not believe that McFlRLiND is 
connected in any way with the NRP at present. 



advised in March, 1953 that | 

I of the Ame rican Comm ittee for the 

Culture . He said that | leas born ini lanri haril 


I was the 


T-l stated in July, 1953 that | I had come to New 

York City during June of 1953 and had stayed at MISS' farm for several days . 

He said that | | had attended the NRF meetin g on Ju ne 26, 1953 and was a 

guest speaker, This informant said that after | | had returned to Los 

■uigeles , . ZEISS had expressed great concern to other members of/ the NRP concerning 
reason for visiting New York. MISS had expressed the belief that 


- 22 - 


NY 105-6112 



b6 i: 

blc' 


s 


I 


P®y ^ ave 136611 h®re as a spy for some group which was attempting to 

counteract the pro-German, neo-Nazi groups in New York City. 


D0T.LD 7PTHUR S“,"N 
83— it2 209th Street 
Queens Village, New York 

T-i; stated in May, 1953 that WU* -T IN had been recruited 
by KEITH THOMPSON for work in pro-German^ neo-Nazi groups with ^hich THOMPSON 
vss connected. He said that S' "'JI had formed a youth group which held 
meetings and whose activities were directed by THOMPSON. The informant 
said that THOMPSON told SEWN that it would be interesting for the members 
of this group to attend meetings of the HUP, but that the youth group members 
were not to join the NRP or any other organization. THOMPSON said that 
these members of the youth group were to be future national socialist leaders 
in the United States and that he, THOMPSON, did not want the names to 
appear on any list that would he made cognizant to the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation. 


This informant said he knows that oY.UJ has attended 
several NRP meetings but later was told by THOMPSON 1 ' not to attend any 
more NRP meetings. 



T-l stated that he is not acquainted with the above 
individual and has never known of his being active in the NRP. 

Baron UTLLIVM FR'.RY VON BLOOifRER'’- 
233 Marlborough Street 
Boston, Massachuset ts 

. T- 1 advised in Ipril, 1953 that V0 3T BL00?®ERG had been in 

touch with “EISS, THOMPSON , FLE CKEN -STEIN and M ‘.DOLE- and has on several 
occasions addressed neo-Nazi groups in New York City. T-l stated, however, 
that VON BLOOMBERG is not actively associated with the NRP or any other 
neo-Nazi groups in New York City. 


- 23 - 


b6 

hi C 


NY 105-6112 


, advised in , x pril. 1953 that T^SC?rRJ'T.^TF T KT 

fltWlfnlf r a Pt00 ! ffiE 5 iG as sympathetic to the general aims of the n PP 
lthough not an actual member or connected mth the organization. 


T-l advised in 'pril of 1 9$3 that 

have associated mth "BISS in the past and that he 

, ps “ hls automobile. This informant advised that f 



, xi i x ui’ntciu u eta vise a "cnat; 

observed an conferences vnith -.BISS before and after KRP meetings. 


is lenovm to 
’BIS S for many 
Jhad been 


had been 


_ . This informant further advised that i I haH > 

^ f 'f „® S3 k d ™ 8 the e »ly part of 1953 in an attempt to f et 

jSS®£ 

a^a t hat t h L^y a L1 SS 

-*»• or s^pathijfXo^f W53 ttet the -» 


Ho said that a person named T 


said that Mrs ^^EDEfF'Y^' E^S d t“° r th ° HRP ' ™ S inforaant also 
-.nDn^ _,K E.uSS has the same sympathies as her husband. 

v-m wttvo t u , . informant stated that a person by the name of 
attended SRp°meetil B s! 3130 I °' 0m *° hi ” t0 a ”“ bor of the KHP and 


has boon present aT^SoSjs^tVSs * «“ ““ < 


any of these persS liXefaS,^’ 1953 that hS ” aS not acmainted 'rtth 


i 


r 




% «* 

1 


NY 105-6112 


0. STATED AIMS IND OBJECTIVES 07 THE SEP 


Confidential Informant T-10, of known reliability, on 
‘.ugust 22, 19k9, provided a pamphlet entitled "Program of the National 
Renaissance Party" in which the purpose and aims of the party were stated 
as follows : ■ 


'ims « 

1. Nationalization of our people through an educational campaign 
among college, church and labor groups. 

2. Termination of political bureaucracy and establishment of rule 
by the intellectual elite. 

3. Private enterprise and equality of opportunity for the ambitious. 

U. Repeal of all bureaucratic red tape involving private enterprise 
and industrial evolution through monopoly. 

5 . Vast rearmament program for defense j atomic energy to be 
governed by the military. 

6. Ten year reconstruction project for complete slum clearance. 

7. Right to work in "open shops" free of labor czar tyranny. 

8. To free politics and culture from domination by racial minorities. 

9. Acceptance and reindustrialization of Germany and Japan as allies 
in the ' estern coalition against Communism. 

10. To cease squandering '.morican wealth and resources abroad while 
many Americans remain poorly housed, clothed and fed. 

11. Free college education for all ‘.merican youth. 

12. To create a united national community wherein workers and management 
can work, hand in hand, toward our great national destiny envisioned by the 
founders of our unerican Republic. 


L 


- 25 - 


t 


< 



my 105-6112 


13. To replace cowardice and the glorification of vreakness with a 
national community based on courage, strength and loyalty. 

This pamphlet also sets forth the program of the party 

as follows: 


The National Renaissance Party is devoted to a renaissance 
of ..merican culture and a resurrection of the '.merican people. The 
philosophic doctrine of our party is known as Animism - a socio-political 
doctrine based on ILEX’NDSR H'.FELTC* T, -S concept of an '.merican Republic 
dominated and governed by the best minds of the nation or the intellectual 
elite. The present inroads of Communist theory in America are due solely 
to the false concept of democracy, which has permitted racial minority pressure 
groups to force their will on the political rabble in .ashington. To maintain 
a job a politician must have votes and since the racial minority groups, 
who foster Communism in all nations, vote in a unified bloc, they can buy 
the votes of our parliamentarians in Congress and State Legislatures. 

It is utterly useless 'to look for last minute aid from- 
the divided social clubs and discussion- groups of the conservative Republican 
party. These dignified, elderly gentlemen have left the field, sadly 
disillusioned after out last election , iiich they hoped to win by the use 
&f old line political hacks against the crusading fanaticism of a militant 
social philosophy. Communism. Tens of thousands of the ..merican youth were 
won over to Marxism and the program of New Deal Socialism through lack of a 
counter philosophic doctrine to augment their faith in their nation and race. 
Rest assured that flag waving, Sunday school lectures and political wind bags, 
whose capacity for downright lying is seldom excelled, will never sot the 
..merican ■ soul aflame with crusading fanaticism and love of America, only a 
new doctrine will suffice, 

T-10 also furnished a pamphlet entitled "The Race Question 
and the Tolerance Racket" which was published by the NRP, 22k East Main 
Street, Beacon, New York, in which it was stated that "the MRP stands for 
a net; freedom, the freedom from interference in the affairs of -soverign 
states by conniving revolutionary elements of this racial minority which, 
while condemning HITLER for annexing Austria and the Sudetenland which was 
predominently dominated by Germans, itself seized lands belonging to the 
Arab states. In this case of outright aggression , the Israelite aggressors 
were championed by the He?/ Deal leader, whiph their funds and power had 
placed in office." 


- 26 - 


i 


m 



m 105-6112 


The "National Eenaissance Bulletin” dated June, 19k9 
carried under a sub-heading "Official Organ of the' ?TRP Devoted to .jainism, 
a Philosophy Based on Values of Individual Personality, Private Enterprise 
and Government by the Intellectual Elite". 

The "National Renaissance Bulletin" dated January, l$h9 
under the caption "hhat he Stand ~h>r», listed the following: 

The FRP has been created for the following purposes ; 

1. To organize a voting bloc of uncrican citizens of Finnish, German, 
Latvian, Estonian, Lithuanian, hite Russian and Latin extraction to oppose 
the flood of Marxist ideologies in '.meric a and to - act as a counterweight to 
the racial minority voting blocs. 

2. The erection of tho MRP as a political force in its own right, 
to wrest control of America from cowardly middleclass parties who have 
become instruments for electing candidates satisfactory to the minority 
races but hostile to the interests of tho great mass of the ..merican people. 

3. To organize the power of '.merican industrial interests in a 
campaign to educate the great mass of American people, in particular the 
workers and win them back to their race and nation through the medium of 
a vast educational campaign to be launched by the HR?. 

b. To expose the truth behind 7orld Mar Ji by making known the 
insidious chicanery of the new deal regime in driving this country into war 
on behalf of the minority, races, who had driven the nations of Central 
Europe into a state of religious fury against the slow moral poisoning of the 
people. '.7e are experiencing the same sensations • in, 'merica at present 
resulting in vicious sex crimes, sex orgies between negroes and teen-age white 
girls in Minnesota and the rising tide of pornography and sexual degeneracy 
as depicted in our literature, films, art and music. 

The "National Renaissance Bulletin" of January, 1952 
stated the NRP was organized in 19U9 to combat both Communism and International- 
ism. It stated that the party believes in the principles of' 'merica first 
and racial nationalism, and that their bulletin reached 12,000 people per 
month. 


- 27 — 



i 






m 105-6112 


The "national Renaissance Bulletin" dated .pril, 1953 
set out in sub-heading "Official organ of the national Renaissance Party 
devoted to a restoration of the .naerican Republic, the preservation of 
American sovereignty and the establishment of an American regime based on 
the principles of racial nationalism and social justice." 

"he "Rational Renaissance Bulletin" dated Hay, 1953, set 
out in sub-heading "Although ADOLPF HITLER is dead, his philosophy lives 

again in the growing struggle of fascist forces in Ar, p V et 

the Middle East. Ghat HITLER accomplished m Europe, the NRP shall yet 

accomplish in America", 

T-2 stated in April, 1953 that KEITH THOMPSON and| 


the objectives of the NRP were: 


1. To work for the release of all Gorman war criminals. 

2. To combat the present government of 'estern Germany and 
Gorman Chancellor KOFRAD ADEN '-TIER. 


be 

b7C 

b7D 


3. To oppose Communism. 

T-2 furnished a postcard in .pril, 1953 announcing an 
wpp «iiv hn ‘ nril 11 1953. This postcard stated "our task is the 

consolidation 'of all German, Hungarian and Irish racial groups and second y, 
the gaining of influence for a show of power in .jnencan politics . 

T-2 also furnished a booklet issued by the Democratic . 
nationalist Partv of the United States of North America, which he obtained 
frm THOMPSON in April, 1953. This booklet sets forth the following aims 
of the’ Democratic Nationalist party, which this informant stated was tne 

predecessor of the NRPt 


1. To promote the cause of Democratic Nationalism in our 
folkland, the United States of North jnerica . 

2. To increase the sense of social, economic, political and 
racial responsibility in our white folk who are members of our fo 
community. 


- 28 - 







1JZ 105-6112 


3. To advance the spirit of friendship and good fellowship in our 
folk community. 

iw To safeguard our white folk from all alien enemies within our 
folkland through orderly and regular participation in local state and 
national politics. 


The June, 1953 "Rational Renaissance Bulletin" carried 
the following article; 

"\'e are asking all our members and supporters to please 
contribute whatever sum they are able to aid in the tremendous struggle 
in which the FRP is engaged. Every dollar you give acta as a front line 
soldier in the monumental struggle against the Jewish exploiters of Aryan 
mankind. Our party banner will yet fly over the ".hite House in Vashington 
once the American people have united against the political parasites of 
the Democratic and Republican parties and their Jewish taskmasters. " , 

T-l advised that JA-ES M'.DOLE had made the following 
statements at public meetings of the MRP; 

On February 21, 1953 N ’.IX)LE said that just as sure as I 
am standing before you I will plant the swasticka in ' ashington one day. I 
mil solve the Jewish problem -once and for all. I will finish the job that 
HITLER started. MMOLE described HISEHHO" .EE as IKE the kike, that bloody 
butcher whose hands are red with the blood- of German women and children. 

He said that if they tried to lead us into "or Id Aar III we will take the 
arms they give us but instead of shooting at the Russians we will teach the 
youth of our country to turn the weapons against ' the Jews and that will 
solve the problem once and for all. 

On May, 15, 1953, according to the informant, M'JDOLE 
said vie stand for white Christian America. TRUiO should be killed and 
everyone who embraces Communism should be killed immediately. 

On July 10, 1953, MADOLE also reported to have said that 
there is no room for Christianity and Democracy today. Fascism is the only 
way out as only Fascism has contained Communism and will conquer. 'Vo are 
Fascists and proud of being Fascists. 


- 29 - 


£ 




V Y 105-6112 


On July 2h, 1953, 1U30LE 'stated that TRIM'J? was a greater 
traitor then the ROSE‘ T BERG-S and he. deserves to get the chair. He said 
that EISEI'TMO".SR is the same breed and gang as TPJF3 and THR. 

On July 31, 1953, M-DOLE stated that TRUIvt'-F was a traitor 
and should have been shot and that the Yashington politicians are selling 
us out and that the Jews control the United States government, the press, 
radio and cinema. 

D. -POTION T.-KE7 TO BiPLEriENT THE PROOF. Ja 01- THE HRP 
1. Publications 


T-l stated in July, 1953 that the "rational Renaissance 
Bulletin 1 ! was the official publication of the NRP and that it lias been issued 
more or less on a monthly basis for the past four years. He said that this 
pamphlet usually contains several articles by members of the party which 
adhere to the party line of pro-Nationalism and anti-Semitism". He. said that 
’’EISS usually arranged for the money for the publication and advised MYDOLE 
as to what articles should be included. He said that "EISS frequently had 
articles of his own in this paper under many aliases and that- MiBOEE has 
written a great deal of the material contained in them. 

The informant stated that copies of this publication are 
passed out to the people who attend the HR? street meetings and mailed to 
individuals who have subscribed to it. The stated price of this bulletin 
as contained therein is ^2.00 for twelve issues'* He stated that these 
bulletins have also been mailed to persons whom it was believed might be 
sympathetic to the FRP principles. He said that nailing lists for this 
publication were probably obtained from other pro-German grouns in Hew York 
City. 


T-2 in -pril, 1953 provided the .pril, July and Oc ober, 
1952 issues of the "Rational Renaissance Bulletin". . « 

The '.pril, 1952 issue contained an article by JQKF , 
EUIIDOFF entitled "Jhsism vs. Communism", and an article by J '.LIES H. IT .BOLE 
entitled "The Eisenhower Fiasco in Germany". 


- 30 - 


;/.r 105-6112 


The article ‘"fascism vs. Communism" is an anti-Semitic 
article which states democracy xs unable to successfully combat Communism 
and only fascism can eliminate Communism. 

The "Eisenhower Riasco in Germany*' article is bitterly 
anti-Semitic and criticizes General D‘ IGUT D. EISENHCTJCR'S conduct in the 
occupation of Germany and blames him for what M1R0LE describes as "the 
infamous war crime trials in Nuremberg", 

The July, 1952 issue contains an article entitled "Exposing 
the Jewish ' ar Criminals" by J AS-S H, M'-DOLE, which is a bitter anti-Semitic 
article and excuses Nazi Germany's conduct toward Germans of Jewish faith. 

In the October, 1952 issue there contained an article 
entitled ’"The Revolt Against Aryan Civilization" by J ACES H. M-iDOLE and an 
article entitled " \dolph Hitler: .'n Vppreciation" , by EUST\CS MULLENS. 

Both of these articles are of an anti-Semitic nature. 

T-2 provided a pamphlet entitled "DNP" issued in 1951 
by .the Democratic Nationalist Party of the United States of Forth America, 
which organization rp -2 previously identified as being synonymous with the 
NRP. This booklet sets out the aims of the Democratic Nationalist Party which 
have previously been set forth in this report, and lists a twenty point 
program, which program is anti-won- \ryian and anti- '.lien. This program 
also calls for close cooperation with Mexico and Central and South \merica. 

The "National Renaissance Bulletin" dated February, 19U9 
set out the following plan for an alliance of all Nationalist publications 
under the heading "National Renaissance Press ’.ssociation" : 

"The National Renaissance " J arty, as one of the two existing 
Nationalist parties in the United States, is seeking to establish a greater 
degree of cooperation and joint offort among pro-Nationalist publications 
here and abroad. The success of the venture we are undertaking depends 
entirely on the willingness to cooperate of the editors of these publications. 
Since 1933 we have all been sadly lacking in that spirit of comradeship and 
'common effort towards a common goal which has been responsible, not only 
for our failure to attain political victory but also our failures to prevent 
the repeated victories of the Marxists.* For once let's bury the hatchet 1 of 
petty jealousies and antagonism and work together. If each Nationalist 


- 31 - 


♦ 


'I* 





NY 105-6112 


editor will read this and then appoint himself as a self appointed committee 
of one to carry out his or her- part of the bargain, we can stop complaining 
about our enemies and start rolling up political victories ourselves. Let's 
borrow a leaf from the Marxist book and learn how to work together for a 
rationalist leader in the “hite House in 1952. ' e will all find this 

more valuable than harping on petty issues and back biting each other. The 
Red tress in Hew York has admitted time and again that the one thing it fears 
is Nationalist unity such as came in Germany under Hitler, Spain under 
franco, etc. 


"How here is the plan. ' e arc developing a National 
Renaissance Press association, no dues whatsoever are required) just 
cooperation on the part of each editor, here and abroad. Here is what each 
editor taking part in this press association will be required to do: 

"1. Once a month oach editor mil reserve a page for the 
National Renaissance press Ass'n. On this page will be placed, the name of 
each publication, foreign and domestic, supporting the Press Association, 
the name of its editor the mailing address, and a review of the particular 
work carried on by each publication. ]3y this moans every publication 
participating will have a chance to greatly increase its circulation and 
the number of its subscribers. No matter how many or ho 1 .? few subscribers 
you have at present, each editor stands to gain by his cooperation, 
furthermore, the Nationalists r/ho read these publications will be given an 
expanded view of the nation-wide as well as the International Front 
on which he death struggle between Marxism and Nationalism is being waged. 

"2. AH editors participating in the National 
Renaissance Press Association mil exchange their publications each month. 

"3. Ml editors participating in the press association 
will,, inasmuch as they are affiliated to no political party, support the 
National Renaissance Party in such national functions as taking up 
petitions for redresses of local, state or national grievances imposed 
by Red statesmen, advertising important mass meetings, etc. In fact, whenever 
we hear of Nationalist meetings anywhere we should all cooperate, to the 
best of our ability, to make them a success. 

"Each editor cooperating in the Rational Renaissance Press 
\ssociation will give space to our Nationalist allies who have publications 
functioning overseas." 


- 32 - 


NY 105-6112 


V 





2, Street Meetings 

T-l stated that the FRP has held public and private 
meetings since it first came into existence. He said that private meetings 
have been held in various rented halls in Yorkville,, as well as at homes 
of the individual members. He further stated that the public meetings have 
been held on various street corners in the Yorkville section of Hew York 
under police permit. He stated that during these meetings the speakers 
urged the gathering to become members of the NET and to donate money to its 
cause. 


T-2 stated that the NRP had held at least three meetings 
during the summer of 1952 at the Mt. Hope Firm, liiddleborough, New York, 
and that the following were in attendance? 


GEORGE VTERICK 
.FREDERICK ' .EISS 
SPrjRD 1LECKENSTEIN 


KEITH THOMPSON 


The informant* stated that he did not know the purpose 
of these meetings or any discussions that" took place. 


b6 

b7C 


T-2 stated that an HRP meeting in the form of a rally 
was held at a pr irate hall at 169 East 86th Street, New York City, on 
Ipril 11, 1953j at which approximately thirty to forty people attended. 

At this meeting THOMPSON urged 'the group to make speeches on street corners 
and to attempt to persuade college students to join the HRP. 



The "National Renaissance Bulletin" dated June, 1953 
under the heading "National Renaissance party Grows In Power" by J '.I4ES I-I. 
INDOLE, stated the following : 


"Despite ever increasing opposition from the Jewish press 
and radio commentator, Barry Gray, the National Renaissance Party has gained 
ground steadily during the warm spring months of 1953. e cannot sufficientlj’- 
thank our devoted supporters whose funds have made possible this cruside for 


- 33 - 


racial nationalism and social justice. 

"This month our movement, under the leadership of Mr. J. ' '. 
Mitchell, set up headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky. Our local headquarters 
is now situated at 2627 Kale .Vvonue, Louisville 1 , Ky. Supporting our organi- 
zational efforts in this area is the new Nationalist newspaper,- "The American 
Eagle," published by Mr. Millard Grubbs. You can obtain samples of this' 
new Nationalist periodical by writing tot "The American Eagle," Box 1662 , 
Louisville, Ky. ill supporters in the Louisville area should contact Mr. 
Mitchell at once. 


"Mass street meetings of the National Renaissance Party 
continue to take place every Friday evening at 8 P.M. on the southeast 
comer of 88th Street and York .'.venue, N, Y. G. in the heavily populated 
Yorlcville area of Central Manhattan. Large Audiences pack the corner as our 
speakers deliver their messages for two hours and distribute free literature 
to the crowds. The Jewish opposition has sent every possible drunk and 
Communist hoodlum in the area to our meetings only to have them thrown out 
bodily. Newspaper reporters have been present at every meeting. Also present 
on many occasions were John Roy Carlson, author of such books as "Undercover" 
and "The Plotters," Rev. C. Leon Birkhead, director of the ant i-Nat iorialist , 
"Friends of Democracy," and James H‘. Sheldon of the Jewish gang .known as 
the "Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League"'. 

"James H. Sheldon (Shapiro) sent a telegram to Attorney 
General Herbert Brownell Jr. on behalf of his "Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League" 
as follows ; 


'The activities and announced purposes of the National 
Renaissance Party headed by James K. Madole, do not differ appreciably from 
those of the German- American Bund, the Citizens Protective League or the 
Nationalist Action League, all of which are now named as Fascist organizations 
in your Consolidated List of subversive agencies issued under Executive Order 
9835.' "e respectfully .urge that you take prompt action to add this organization 
to your officially announced list of subversive jFbscist groups.* 

"This, telegram from Sheldon was printed by "the American 
Hebrew" on May 29 , 1953 as part of a smear article entitled "Local Neo-Nazi 
“ill Run For Congress In Yorl-cville". This article refers to H« Keith Thompson, 


NT 105-6112 




former registered agent for General Otto Reamer's Socialist Reich Party, 

Party tiJkS lng p / Un - f0r J°?f eSS 111 on the National Renaissance 

^ e ^ C5on f ernin g Sheldon's telegram our party has already sent a 
^° ; ttorne y General Brownell concerning the background 
that tbe 7 n+ l8 v '^ 1-Nazi Jeague*. 'jnong other things mentioned was the fact 
Govern^n-i- 1-i ^ z ^_ Le i a p e ’ has clearly usurped the power of the Federal 
‘■tlanV-i r ^ establishing a private police force on American soil. In 

the f ia * thlS f r ° Up bribed throe y omi g men -to commit perjury during 
Z Sior ?r er L °°f S and *"“7 Burke * l ea ders of ^Columbians 

Rollins 1 V , XI ^ an of - ficer of ■this 'jiti-Nazi League, Richard 

New Srk reS eS “ito the private safe of Royal Scott Gulden, a 

" -u r ^. rea ~; es ^ ate ana stole two private files concerning the 

"S e SzfTe°L l?he °r der ° f a 1776 ^ a patkotic ' anti-CommuSS SroS. The 
urti-jjazi League is fmanced.by the Jew, Isadore Lipschutz, a foreign born 

diamond merchant who was refused .American Citizen shin until a few years ago 

New YnSJ rn 0 K1 ? ral turpitude ‘ "estbrook Fegler, the columnist fo? 'The 
Gestapo. J urn ^ 1 ‘ merican S *»s written innumerable exposes on this private 

v „ "? n Ju 5 e 26 ’ 19 ^ 3 > T?e had as our guest sneaker, Mr. James 

of lofnennT 1 °Tf an:Laer from Lo3 -‘ : -ngeles, California, who addressed a crowd 

tL mited Nat?L?^°f Va r v maSS v me6t ^ g ** * orkville - He explained how 
tT* r o t p d _ iJatlons fl f? had been banned in Los ngeles and the traitorous 

ait'etf"'' 0 ' pr °! raH klcked out of California schools. Mr. Ihite, lias 

distribn+S a ?i Zed a , fulXy e G ui PP ed uniformed group in his city and has 
distributed thousands of copies- of the 'National Renaissance Bulletin'. 

hiarerf tit, H o + v '.' 0ur full3r uniformed corps in Mew York City has been 
sltftt l the ^ oxnt f om& ^ of Matt Koehl Jr. and Hans Schmidt. I merit 
y tern h-_s been devised on neatness, attendance and comprehension of the 

Thl ! gr ° Up includes nan from all five boroughs of wew York. 
• f x ^ corps are held in a private center every Thursday 

prior to our Friday night open air rallies." 

3. association ' ith Other Groups 

, _ T Confidential Informant T-ll, of known reliability, 

Slfl r’ 1 !’ 1 191,9 that He®"SLj®, Director of the 

S tta »jn? phila *>lphia, tod recently attended a meeting 
e , R,. in New York City. The informant stated that McFIHLIMD had said 


- 35 - 


b6 

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V 



» 



m 105-6112 


that J'ISS H. ir.DOLE had organized about 200 people, most of them elements 
of the old Christian Front into the UR? and that he and M ’.DOLE had discussed 
a proposed merger of the I'JRP and the Rationalist Action League. McF..RL.\ND 
had said that as yet there is no basis for a merger but pointed out that 
they did agree on terms for close cooperation. lTcF’JiL..MD said that as 
3-i .DOLE had a very "specific program worked out and would not deviate from that 
program, it would be most difficult for the Nat ionalist Action League to 
merge with his organization. 


Confidential Informant T-12, of known reliability, on 
July 5> 1950, furnished a letter signed by JAMES IN-DO LE on the letterhead 
of the MRP, ad dressed to NTLT. TAT Me VARIANT) dated jfebruary 7, 1950, in which 
he stated that l l and EDNARD 1.. 3JLECKEMSTEIN are back r;ith us 

and stated that the German-American Republican League., The Estorius Society, 
the German-.mierican Voters XLliance and the MRP are contemplating a final 
alliance. He said that this vd.ll mean a merging of mailing lists and 
contributions into one political p arty. He inv ited Me P INLINE to enter the 


spring campaign in the election' of 


who is to run for Congressman 


from the Yorkville district against VITO MiRC.MTOMIO, 


T-12 also furnished a letter dated July 20, 1950 from 
F1D0LE to IJcNTRLNUD in which M.JX3LE stated that KURT fJERTIG r S group has 
merged with ours and become part of the party, financially and politically. 


T-3 on May 21, 1951 stated that MIDDLE in a speech at an 
MRP meeting on May 15, 195l>. mentioned a neo-Fascist convention to be held 
in Sweden and said that he would try and contact them. He said that he was 
the man they would need and that he would learn more about this Sweden 
meeting in order to effect some kind of cooperation. 


T— U stated in July, 1953 that when THOMPSON was associated 
with the BKP he wanted to organize youth groups all over the country as an 
auxiliary to the MSP and train these youths to eventually assume control 
of the neo-Nazi movement throughout the United States. 


IE=1 stated in July, 1953 that [ 


, has corresponded with both '.EISS and 11 . DOLE recently 
in re gard to a proposed speaking tour for MADOLE throughout the Middle Nest 


which 


] would finance. 


- 36 - 


NY 105-6112 


T-l also furnished a latter on lugust 16, 1953 from 

I H to M1D0LE which indicates that- MIDDLE and the NRP ought to be 

used by a ‘isconsin group. This -letter is set out as follows: 

n 721-57 th St. . 

Kenosha, '.‘is. 

• July 27, 1953 

"Personal and Confidential - Please Destroy this letter 
after reading. 

"Mr. James H. Madole, 

"Dear Mr. Madole: 

"Thank you for your letter of July 23rd, and your acceptance 
of the idea to unite 1|0 million German Americans behind their courageous 
racial brothers in Europe, and as previously outlined. 

"I would greatly appreciate the opportunity to come dorm to 
F. Y, and see you and Fr. ' eiss (it was a letter I received from him some 
months ago, and several more since then, from him, that started me writing 
you), however, I feel it is going to be impossible at this time for me to 
make such trip. 


"You state that in the absence of my doing so, you would 
meet me out here somewhere, and this is what it will have to be, I belieye, 
and so I would like to ask if Milwaukee or Chicago would be suitable. 

"•Several points arise in ray mind which will require our 
careful decision in the matter of- bringing about the mass arising of Uo 
million German Americans, and that is, that it is going to require immense 
publicity, by that I mean we want our first rallies to get mention in the 
newspapers so it vail be taken up thereafter like wild fire and sweep across 
the nation. 


"Now if we do this in the name of the National Renaissance 
Party, then the newspapers will give it no publicity, because the NR party 
is known to be anti -Jewish and every regular newspaper in the country including 
even the Chicago Tribune, altho daily telling about the world Red crisis. 


- 37 - 


NY 105-6112 


% 




NY 105-6112 

nevertheless ivsm. says that communism is a Jewish movemen^. The 
follow this hypocrisy, and are not patriotic enough to tell the real t 
thereby they let the internal enemy get away mth its plot on the uninform 
public. 

tiQur great problem, hoover, mil be to get the U0 Million 
G-A , 's together into one organization, and to g<?t the publicity o ° 

Therefore it might be better, as you have stated, wit a an 
etc., and not connect the name of the HR party to it (altho it m 
to be done by the individuals of the NR party) until we get tne_ organization 
built. AFTER we get the U0 Million into one organization, we will be bie 
to come out with all issues and fear nothing, they then mil not be abl 
to stop us. In other words, let us talce the; Unification ^nd lrtedom of 
Germany issue as the issue to unite the k0 Million and 

to sweep the country with it. Ifw do not connect the of ^ th < d 3 1. 

party with it, altho we mil have to be the individuals doing j (y ' 

then^ they cannot refuse to put it in the papers, (because anti- Jewish or 
Fascist elements behind it as they would otherwise say). 

"The U. S. administration says it is for the unification 
and freedom of Germany (altho they do not mean It) but they state »ey must 
unite Europe first, that is what they set up to give them an out, because 
they know they mil never be able to unite Europe. But having given lip 
s?rrtS to thi unification of Germany, idea, they cannot oppose the organisation 
m mill Cfoato of G-.'- people to bring it about. \t ieast , thoy caiino P 
oppose, altho they will do all in their power under cover to prevent out 

success* 

«t an! very pleased to note that you have opened a Louisville, 
Kv branch as your June bulletin states, I note that you have in Los mgeles 
SdT Y uniformed corps. This is good, I have long known that therp is an 
eleJent of power in the uniform, it mil give strength and publicity to your 
organization, and growth. 

"I vrould greatly appreciate your ideas as to point 8 of 
your program, what kind of a government you advocate as a "trained nationa - 
Winded elite"" and how it would he selected, continued, etc. rt you could gi 


■ 33 - 


HT 105-6112 


me a few words on it,, it would clear up questions not not; clear to me. 

I find your letters very comprehensive and ri"ht to the point, realistic, 
and that is what it takes for success. 

"So if you vdll let me know about meeting you in Chicago 
or Milwaukee after which wo could set a date, I will be very appreciative. 

"Thanking you, I am, 

"Very Sincerely, 

|/s / b6 

:b7C 


- p - 


m 105-6112 


IHFQRP J- T TS 

Identity of 
Source 


1UCNISTR API VE P 'jG2 


Date of Activity and/or Date 
Description of Infor- Received 
nation 


Info rc "EIS3 


Info re 


it/29/53 

3/17/53 


All other info supplied 7/15/53 
by T-l 



1952 and 1953 
Info re THOMPSON 


'-pril, 

1953 

6/19/53 


.*.gent to 
‘ Jhoui' 

Furnished 



SI PAUL M. 
ROTHERMEL 

S- JAMES P. 
MIRTH'! -A 

s.. I 


File # 

‘ here 
Located 


105-6071-1' 


Instant 

Report 

Instant 

Report 



10/7A9 



10/8/J19 

7/3/53 



SA JAMES P, 
MARTIN A 

SAl 


105-6112-9 


Info re DOF .LD ST$ 5/6/53 


SA JAMES F. 
MARTIN &. 

SAl 


l05-5759-£ 



6/27/50 


6/27./50 S‘- J0TF' T l. 105-117U-15 

BRODERICK 


v. 






NY 105-6112 


HAlOA. ARTS (GONT'D) 


HKENISTPAECVE P-.GE (COI'IT'D) 


Identity of Bate of Activity and/or Date Agent to 

Source Description of Infor- Received thorn 

mat ion Furnished 


File § 

"There 

Located 



1 Juno, 1953 


6/13/53 




I 100-112532- 
- 6 


T-7 Physical 
Surveillance 

3/7/53 

3/7/53 

S1SI 1 

i — i a 

i“-| 1 

Instant b6 
Report' b7c 

b7D 

T-3 Ct-2 

1951 

5/21/51 

Ltr to Bureau 

5/21/51 

, 105-6112- 
2k 

T-9 1 1 

1953 

3 A/53 


105-6071- 

r\r J 


T-10 

1 9h9 

8/2 2 A 9 

S'. 

1 1 

105-6112- \ 
1A1 &2 j 

T-ll 

| 19U9 

Jan • , 19U9 

SEl 

105-6112-6 | 

T-12 

1950 

7/5/50 

SS 

I -1 1 

105-6112-12 | 


MISCELLANEOUS 

One copy of this report is being sent to Secret Service, HYC> 
because of the nature of remarks made by M'-BOLE concerning President EISEUHO"ER. 


-Ul- 




NY 105-6112 


ADMINISTR 1TI.VE P-.GE (CONT'D) 


MISCELLANEOUS ( PONT 1 D) 

Copies of this report are being sent to Newark, Boston, 
Chicago and Los Angeles for info, inasmuch as individuals mentioned in this 
report resided In those cities and concurrent investigations in the Gorman 
field are likely in these cities. 

I Imentioned on page 17 of this report 


is the subject of a case in the NYO entitled | | bG-O" 

(NY file 100-111*2 2k) . 

FREDERICK ' El >S mentioned on page 9 of this report is the 
subject of a case in the NYO entitled '‘FREDERICK CARLES EERDIN1ND ‘JESS, 

IS-X” (Ny file 100-1118.93) . ' [ 

HAROLD KEITH THOMPSON mentioned on page 18 of this report has 
been investigated and his activities reported under cages entitled ".American 
Committee for the freedom of General Remer, I-S-X" (NY 10$-k67k) and "American , 
Committee for the Advancement of ~.e stern Culture, IS-X" (NY 105-6071). 

DON ALD o' AN mentioned on page 23 of this report is the subject 1 
of a case entitled "DONALD S'A: T , IS-X" (NY 105-5759). 

ED' ARD A. FLECK.EMSTEIN mentioned on page 19 of this report 
is under investigation in the case entitled " Voters Alliance for Americans 
of German Ancestry, IS-G” (NY 105-11714-. ' 

It is n oted that T-l who supplied a great deal of info rmation i|| 
in this investigation is 




NY 105-6112 


AIMENI5TPATIVE PAGE (CONT'D) 

LE.xDS (CONT’D) 

LOUISVILLE 


At Louisville, Kentucky 
".'ill attempt to ascertain the a ctivities of 


, as referred to on page 3U 

auu uex, ermine ix unis group is actually allied ;.i.th the NRP i n NYC. 

MILTIUK3E 


It Kenosha, '"isconsln 


J.1L obtain background information on| 

l and attempt to ascertain what group he represents. 


PHILlUELPHIl 


It Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 

’ ill attempt to ascertain if the Nationalist lotion League 
and .ILL! -H McPAPIAND mentioned on page 22 are lending support to the subject 
organization. 


5EIEPMCES 


NY airtel to Bureau, 5/9/53. 
NY letter to Bureau, 6/22/53. 





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